Archive for the ‘Artificial Intelligence’ Category

At LI hospitals, the artificial intelligence revolution has already begun – Newsday

The words "artificial intelligence" evoke a futuristic world, but at certain Long Island hospitals, the future is here and now.

At some hospitals, nurses track the severity of patients symptoms with help from artificial intelligence, a broad term that encompasses computer programs that can be fed huge volumes of data and trained to analyze new data.

Others use A.I. to predict which patients are at risk of becoming ill again because they dont follow instructions after theyre discharged, or those who are healthy enough to be allowed to sleep through the night instead of being awakened to have their vital signs checked. Still others use the technology to speed the analysis of sleep studies that help diagnose conditions such as sleep apnea.

The ventures vary widely in their origins, scope and funding. One is a new company called Truveta, formed in an unusual alliance between New Hyde Park-based Northwell Health and 19 other health systems across the country. The company, which recently announced $200 million in new private funding, pulls information from millions of the networks patient records anonymized to protect confidentiality and provides real-time analysis to health care providers.

Northwell Healthhas joined forces with 19 other health systems to start acompany called Truveta, which recently announced $200 million in new private funding from its member networks and its CEO, Terry Myerson. Using information from millions of the networks anonymized patient records, the company provides real-time analysis to health-care providers.

NYU Langone Hospital-Long Islandin Mineola has launched an A.I.-powered program that tracks COVID-19 patients vital signs, lab results and other information, recording17 data points every 30 minutes to detect signs of potential deterioration.

Mount Sinai South Nassau in Oceansideuses A.I. to detect patients' risks of falling or becoming severely ill, and to predict how much nursing care they will need.

Stony Brook University'sDepartment of Biomedical Informaticshas received more than $5 million in federal grants to research the potential use of A.I. in diagnosing and treating cancer.

Catholic Health uses A.I.to analyze patients' brain waves, breath patterns, cardiac signals, leg movements and other data points recorded during sleep studies, speeding up the completion of reports that are reviewed by board-certified physicians.

Sources: Northwell Health, NYU Langone Health,Mount Sinai South Nassau,Stony Brook University,Catholic Health

Northwell sees "revolutionary potential" in A.I., Dr. Martin Doerfler, Northwells senior vice president of clinical strategy and development, said in an interview, "and we wanted to be part of it."

On a different scale, another new program got its start on a local nurses laptop during the coronavirus surge last year. After months of research and development, it evolved into an A.I. tool that flags COVID-19 patients at NYU Langone Hospital-Long Island who are at high risk of becoming severely ill in the next 12 hours.

The A.I. program "doesn't take over your decision-making and it never should," said Jeanmarie Moorehead, senior director of operations at the Mineola hospital. "But it is definitely value-added, tremendous value-added to the clinician."

What the A.I. efforts have in common is an ambitious effort to use specialized computer programs to comb through columns of data too vast to be understood by a human being, detect patterns and use that information to guide health care providers in diagnosing and treating patients.

The use of A.I. in health care is on the rise, with global funding in the sector reaching $8.5 billion from January through September nearly double the amount in all of 2019, according to CB Insights, a company that tracks A.I. investments. The United States was the biggest spender, with investments in A.I. in health care totaling $5.45 billion from January through September, the company reported.

Health care technology, including A.I., "is clearly seeing an increased level of investment," especially over the last year and a half, said Peter Micca, a partner and national health tech leader with Deloitte & Touche LLP in Manhattan. "COVID has only accelerated the awareness around the importance of technology in health care."

One hurdle is that, in contrast with industries such as finance and social media, health care data "is completely fragmented," Doerfler said. "We need to know the answers that are hidden inside the fragmented data, and you don't get the answers until you get the data sets large enough that you can find the answers quickly."

Incomplete data sets often lack diversity of race, gender, socioeconomic status and other characteristics, and overrepresent middle-aged white men with health insurance, Doerfler said. By contrast, said Terry Myerson, Truveta's CEO, the data set drawn from its 20 networks represents 16% of all clinical care provided in the United States and reflects "the diversity of our country."

The goal of Truveta, Myerson said, is to "empower our clinicians to be experts" and "help families make the most informed decisions about their care."

Some industry analysts warn of potential pitfalls in the adoption of A.I. At the annual conference of Stony Brook University's Center of Excellence in Wireless and Information Technology this month, Daniel Holewienko, executive director, big data and business intelligence at Henry Schein in Melville, said failing to embrace A.I. would put health care companies "at a competitive disadvantage."

Still, he said, those adopting the new technology can face high costs and difficulties integrating it into their current systems, among other challenges. Protecting privacy, preventing bias and making sure clinicians do not place excessive faith in the machines are among the other concerns, health care providers say.

Dr. Joel Saltz, founding chair of the Department of Biomedical Informatics at Stony Brook University, said the industry has proceeded cautiously in adopting A.I. The advanced technology has become more widely used in the last five years or so, he said.

"These things are incremental, especially in health care, because you've got to make sure they're safe and effective," said Saltz, who is working with colleagues on a project led by the federal Food and Drug Administration, focusing on the use of A.I. in digital pathology. Such tools, he said, are used for "decision support," to aid doctors and nurses rather than replace their work.

Stony Brook's biomedical informatics department is working on three projects funded by more than $5 million in federal grants to research the potential use of A.I. in diagnosing and treating cancer. An A.I. program can examine hundreds of slides and analyze millions of cells, complementing doctors' ability to visually classify tumors, Saltz said. "Think about the difference between a paper map and Google Earth," Saltz said. "It really opens up a whole new way of doing things."

It's possible that some of the research could be put into clinical practice within 10 years, he said.

In some cases, the COVID-19 crisis has sparked innovation by doctors, researchers and nurses as they raced to understand the new virus and find ways to save patients lives. Nurses have been key players in using and, in at least one case, helping to develop the new technology.

At NYU Langone Hospital-Long Island in Mineola, for instance, computers are running a new A.I.-powered program that keeps an eye on COVID-19 patients vital signs, lab results and other information, using patients' electronic medical records to monitor 17 data points every 30 minutes and detect signs of impending danger.

A paper version of the program was born of necessity during the first COVID surge in early 2020. At the time, nurse clinician Cathrine Abbate was seeking a rapid, consistent way to communicate with her fellow nurses and doctors about the severely ill patients suffering from a new and brutal virus.

On video conference calls before and after their shifts, Abbate and other nurses brainstormed about the warning signs that tended to precede a rapid decline in patients condition, such as needing large amounts of oxygen or not being able to eat or move. With that information, she used Microsoft Word to create a blank grid that she printed out at her home in Huntington Station. The grid included seven columns, tracking information about the patients condition. In the hospital, using copies of the grid made it easier for nurses to quickly rank the severity of each symptom and give an overall rating from 1 to 10, with 10 being the worst, she said.

"We needed to be able to fluidly communicate with each other about how the patients were doing," Abbate recalled. "It was just a way to create a language for ourselves."

Nurse manager Sarojini Seemungal helped implement the new system on the 30-bed unit, and alerted her own managers. Moorehead brought it to the attention of researchers at NYU Langone in Manhattan who specialize in analyzing data.

The researchers spent months meeting weekly with nurses and developing an A.I. program that provides information to a rapid response team of critical care nurses at the Long Island hospital who give special attention to the highest-risk patients, said Dr. Yindalon Aphinyanaphongs, director of operational data science and machine learning at NYU Langone Health.

The program acts as a "tireless monitor," taking information about thousands of previous patients including many whose conditions deteriorated and using it to predict whether current patients are likely to decline, he said.

Theres a lot of "hype" about A.I. and its subset machine learning, a term that refers to computers learning from examples, Aphinyanaphongs said.

"A lot of times when people think of artificial intelligence, they think of, you know, WALL-E," he said, in a reference to the 2008 animated movie about a lonely robot. But in fact, "the value in some of these models has to do with, not doing something better than humans, but doing things faster than humans can do," and more consistently, he said.

A tool like the one developed by the nurses and researchers, he said, can take a health care provider who has little experience with COVID, and it "can help elevate their experience and their expertise to the point where they're functioning at the same sort of assessment level as someone who has seen a lot of COVID patients."

The program can be downloaded for free by other hospitals that use the Epic electronic medical records system, Aphinyanaphongs said.

At Mount Sinai South Nassau in Oceanside, computers use A.I. to make sure patients receive precise, personalized care, taking into account the severity of their illnesses and other factors, said Stacey Conklin, chief nursing officer and senior vice president of patient care services. Those at higher risk of falls, for example, get extra help moving around if needed, she said.

A.I. "takes a lot of the subjectivity away from staffing, and allows us to really put the resources where they're needed most," Conklin said. "If I as a manager am trying to figure out where to put all of my resources, it's very helpful for me to be able to look broadly across the unit and see what's going on with all the patients so that I can ensure that the patients are getting the best care."

At the Catholic Health systems six sleep labs, A.I. is used to analyze the sleep studies of patients who spend the night hooked up to machines that record brain waves, breath patterns, cardiac signals, leg movements and other data points to diagnose conditions such as sleep apnea, said Brendan Duffy, director of sleep services at the network.

The data can fill hundreds of pages, and analyzing the information is "a very time-consuming, very meticulous" process that used to take one to two hours for each report, Duffy said.

Once the health system started using the A.I. program about three months ago, he said, that time was reduced to about 20 minutes, he said.

The new system means the sleep labs can get patients on the calendar for follow-up appointments more quickly, so patients spend less time driving while drowsy or suffering compromised immune systems due to sleep deprivation, he said.

But despite their remarkable efficiency, he said, the computers cant have the last word.

A board-certified physician reviews the sleep reports "each and every time, and that's nonnegotiable," he said.

At Northwells Feinstein Institutes for Medical Research in Manhasset, researchers used A.I. to analyze 24 million patient vital sign measurements. The results helped them predict which patients were low-risk enough to sleep through the night with a nurse looking in on them periodically, instead of being awakened to have their vitals checked, according to an article published last year in the journal Nature Partner Journals Digital Medicine.

The health system also is using A.I. to identify certain high-risk patients, said Dr. Jamie Hirsch, director of Northwells data science program.

In presentations about A.I., Hirsch tells his fellow physicians the technology can help identify people such as a fictional patient he has dubbed "Ethel," a sprightly 87-year-old grandmother who is "fiercely independent," but who feels overwhelmed in the hospital, lives alone and might need more assistance than she realizes.

In a busy hospital filled with hundreds of patients, a patient like Ethel might not get the hand-holding she needs, he said.

But when an A.I. program is trained to flag patients who are older, live alone and are coping with a bewildering array of medications and discharge instructions, he said, "now you have a patient experience specialist that's going to come in and say, How are you? Let's sit down, let's talk, you know, how can we make your experience better . How do we get you home, so you can continue living that independent life that you so value?"

He said, "It allows us to focus our energies in the right way, to the right person, at the right time."

Maura McDermott covers health care and other business news on Long Island.

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At LI hospitals, the artificial intelligence revolution has already begun - Newsday

Robotics and artificial intelligence to improve health rehabilitation – EurekAlert

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Credit: UC3M

A Universidad Carlos III de Madrid (UC3M) spin-off, Inrobics Social Robotics, S.L.L., has developed a robotic device that provides an innovative motor and cognitive rehabilitation service that can be used at health centres as well as at home. Inrobics was created using research results from the Universitys Department of Computer Science and Engineering.

The entrepreneurial team has developed a platform made up of four elements: a robot that interacts with the patient, an artificial intelligence system that uses a 3D sensor to control the robot, an application that can be used by health care staff to set up and track sessions, and a cloud-based storage system which contains information and analytics from all of the rehabilitation processes. The 3D sensor allows us to know the patients position at all times.

For example, we know if they are raising their arm, but we also know if they turn their spine to compensate for difficulty when doing so. All of this information is compiled and entered into the clinical reports that are generated, says Fernando Fernndez, professor at the UC3Ms Department of Computer Science and Engineering and founding partner of Inrobics.

The objective is to improve rehabilitation therapies using imitation-based activities and a series of exercises, as well as provide additional tools for health care staff to optimise these sessions. For example, for patients like children, interacting with a robot is like playing with a toy. They never think they are going to the hospital for rehabilitation, they think they are going to play. This is the added value that we offer. On the other hand, we are also able to enrich the therapists working situation, as they often lack tools adapted to specific patients profiles, says Jos Carlos Pulido, founding CEO of Inrobics.

In addition to this, the platform, which has been designed by paediatric professionals (cognitive and functional diversity) along with geriatric professionals (active ageing and accompaniment), can also be used at home as a remote rehabilitation resource to improve family balance and quality of life.

The Spanish National Hospital for Paraplegics (Toledo) is the first centre to conduct a clinical trial using these artificial intelligence tools, which have been used with paediatric patients.with spinal cord injuries.

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Robotics and artificial intelligence to improve health rehabilitation - EurekAlert

Who Says AI Is Not For Women? Here Are 6 Women Leading AI Field In India – SheThePeople

I dont see tech or AI as hostile to women. There are many successful women in AI both at the academic as well as industry levels, says Ramya Joseph, the founder of AI-based entrepreneurial start-up Pefin, the worlds first AI financial advisor. And even on my team at Pefin, women hold senior technology positions. There tends to be a misconception that tech tends to attract a geeky or techy kind of personality, which is not the case at all,

Joseph has a bachelors degree in computer science and masters in Artificial Intelligence, Machine Learning and Financial Engineering. As a wife, mother and daughter, Joseph could closely relate to the crisis of financial advice to plan for the future. She came up with the idea of founding Pefin when her father lost his job due to a lack of financial advice when he jeopardised his retirement plans. Navigating and solving his problems, Joseph realised that many were telling the same problem. Hence she came up with the idea of an AI-driven financial adviser.

No doubt Artificial Intelligence is one of the growing industries in the field of professionalism. As new inventions and developments knock at our doors, the relation between humans and computers is being reassessed. With the expansion of AI, new skills and exceptional human labour is in high demand. But the problem is that despite the evolution in society, the gender pay gap is not shrinking. As per the wef forum, only 22 per cent of AI professionals are women. The report suggests that there is a gender gap of around 72 per cent.

Despite this, many women are breaking the glass ceilings and reforming the field of Artificial Intelligence. Through their skills and leadership, these women are carving the path for other women to participate as AI professionals. So in this article, I am going to list out some women AI professionals in India who changing the gender dynamics through their excellence.

Amarjeet Kaur is a research scientist at TechMahindra. She has a PhD in Computer Science and Technology. Kaur specialises in research techniques and technologies like graph-based text analysis, latent semantic analysis and concept maps among others. She also has expertise in experimentation and field research, data collection and analysis and project management. She is known for her organisational skills and willingness to take charge.

Kaur has also worked with the Department of Science and Technology at Women Scientist Scheme. As a part of the scheme, she helped in developing a technique to automatically evaluate long descriptive answers. With more than ten years of research and teaching experience, Kaur has excellent academic skills. Her academic skills and innovative techniques have gained her a gold medal and a toppers position at Mumbai University. Her innovative skills and course material has also received a place in Mumbai Universitys artificial intelligence and machine learning courses.

Sanghamitra Bandyopadhyay works at the Machine Intelligence Unit of the Indian Statistical Institute. She also completed her PhD from the institute and became its director serving for the years 2015 to 2020. Bandyopadhyaya is also a member of the Science, Technology and Innovation Advisory Council of the Prime Minister of India (PM-STIAC). She specialises in fields like machine learning, bioinformatics, data mining and soft and evolutionary computation.

She has been felicitated with several awards for her work like Bhatnagar Prize, Infosys award, TWAS Prize, DBT National Women Bioscientist Award (Young) and more. She has written around 300 research papers and has edited three books.

Ashwini Ashokan is the founder of MadStreetDen, an artificial intelligence company that uses image recognising platforms to power retail, education, health, media and more. Starting up in 2014, the venture is headquartered in California with offices access Chennai, Bangalore, Tokyo, London and more. She co-founded the platform along with her husband. Speaking to SheThePeople, Ashokan said, Its only natural that the AI we build mimics what weve fed it, until the agency of its own, which could be good or bad. As an industry, we need to think about what were teaching our AI, She also added, Every line of code we write, every feature we put in products we need to ask ourselves, what effect does this have on the way the world will be interacting with it.

Apurva Madiraju is a vice president at Swiss Re Global Business Solutions India in Bangalore. She is leading the data analytics and data science team of the audit function. As the leader, she is responsible for building machine learning and text analytics solution to deal with audit compliance risk.

Madiraju flaunts 11 years of experience across diverse fields like artificial intelligence, data science, machine learning and data engineering. She has developed multiple AI and ML-driven solutions like ticket volume forecasting models, turn-around-time prediction solutions and more. She has worked across companies globally to lead the conceptualisation, development and deployment of many AI and ML-based solutions for enterprises.

With more than 20 years of experience as a Data Scientist, Bindu Narayan serves as the Senior Manager with Advanced Analytics and AI at EY GDS Data and Analytics Practice. At EY, Narayan is AI competency leader for EYs Global Delivery Services. She along with her team offers virtual assistant solutions to clients across the industry. Moreover, with her skills, Narayan has developed many innovative AI solutions and leads in the field of machine learning, customer and marketing analytics and predictive modelling. She completed her PhD from IIT Madras on the topic of modelling Customer Satisfaction and Loyalty.

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Who Says AI Is Not For Women? Here Are 6 Women Leading AI Field In India - SheThePeople

Artificial intelligence in the healthcare sector: Lindera successfully closes financing round of six million euros – KULR-TV

Lindera one of the leading deep-tech companies in the field of computer vision has successfully closed a Series A financing round. The Berlin-based health-tech company is receiving additional growth capital from new investors as well as from its existing shareholders from the Rheingau Founders circle. With its technology, Lindera is democratising the use of high-precision 3D motion tracking in the healthcare sector. Lindera's scientifically tested and validated solution makes it possible to create motion analyses with a smartphone camera, comparable to the gold standard in measurement accuracy (GAITRite).

Karsten Wulf, Co-founder of buw Holding and Shareholder of family office zwei.7, comments on his investment: "Given the demographic developments and ongoing shortage of skilled care professionals, we see enormous potential in digital health and care applications. This is not only about the sustainable improvement of efficiency but also about increasing the quality of patient care. We are convinced that Lindera, with the cutting-edge digital technology it has developed in-house and its scientific excellence, will play an important role in this area while at the same time keep the focus on people." Commenting on the successful financing round, Diana Heinrichs, Founder and CEO of Lindera, says: "Similar to how Amazon has evolved from a pioneer in online book retail to one of the leading tech companies, backed by zwei.7 we are now developing from an AI pioneer in care into a movement specialist along the entire health supply chain."

With its AI-based mobility analysis, Lindera SturzApp, the Berlin-based company is already successfully in use in more than 350 care facilities and therapy centres throughout Germany. Its customer base includes some of the largest German care facility operators. Lindera is also planning to expand internationally via a pilot project in Paris. In addition, long-term cooperations with customers and health insurance companies, as well as deep roots in the care structures, have created the basis for further growth.

In addition to nursing care, Lindera has been deploying its technology in other medical areas for a long time. The company is using patented, self-learning computer vision technology to address inefficiencies in care structures and to standardise billing-relevant movement assessments at the highest level with the goal of increasing the quality of care measurably. As a result, Lindera aims to use its AI-driven medical devices to make lasting changes in other healthcare areas, such as orthopaedics, geriatrics, neurology, and physical rehabilitation. With "LTech" its own software development kit Lindera also provides its smart 3D algorithm to developers of other healthcare applications, contributing to the development of apps, for example, in the field of physiotherapy.

Within the care sector, Lindera has now received one of the largest investments in the DACH region to date. The team intends to use the additional capital to establish an objective, patient-centred quality standard in care, grow internationally, and advance the development for admission, treatment, and discharge management in hospitals.

Issued by news aktuell/ots on behalf of Lindera GmbH

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Artificial intelligence in the healthcare sector: Lindera successfully closes financing round of six million euros - KULR-TV

Sunnybrook launches innovative new artificial intelligence research lab with $1-million gift from TD Bank Group – Canada NewsWire

TORONTO, Nov. 25, 2021 /CNW/ - TD Bank Group has donated a $1-million gift to establish the Augmented Precision Medicine Lab at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre. The Augmented Precision Medicine Lab will develop cutting-edge artificial intelligence (AI) systems to help improve the clinical care that patients receive in the fields of cardiology, cancer and other chronic diseases. Sunnybrook's rich and complex data stores will be harnessed to develop clinical risk prediction models that will enable physicians to provide personalized care to patients and potentially improve outcomes.

With this investment, Sunnybrook will have the resources it needs to build technological infrastructure, attract more talent, and accelerate a number of innovative projects either planned or underway.

"This generous gift will unite medical experts, computer scientists and industry partners to harness the power of big data and machine learning to drive personalized approaches to medicine," says Kelly Cole, President and CEO, Sunnybrook Foundation. "TD has long been a dedicated supporter of innovation at Sunnybrook and we are delighted to take this next step together."

The Augmented Precision Medicine Lab will work closely with industry partners to develop powerful new diagnostic tools, bring them to communities across Canada, and ultimately improve health outcomes.

"AI in medicine will undoubtedly improve the quality of care that patients receive, and, perhaps more importantly, it will improve health-care equity by dramatically widening access to underserved communities and populations," says Dr. Alexander Bilbily, a physician and computer scientist at Sunnybrook who will serve as the director of the new lab. "And by recognizing the essential role that industry plays in health care, we create a clear path from the lab to the patient where these tools can have a real impact on the patient journey."

The Augmented Precision Medicine Lab's first project aims to leverage Sunnybrook's extensive experience with patients with COVID-19 to create AI tools that can identify which patients are more likely to deteriorate. As a result, doctors will be empowered to closely monitor and improve care for these patients. The tool is being developed for use in smaller community hospitals, which demonstrates how AI can extend the reach of medical knowledge to smaller centres with less experience, thereby improving health-care equity for patients in underserved areas.

"The funding announced today will help Sunnybrook enhance its research and develop AI technologies to advance quality health care for patients who need it most," says Janice Farrell Jones, Senior Vice President, Sustainability and Corporate Citizenship, TD Bank Group. "Through the TD Ready Commitment, the Bank's corporate citizenship platform, we are proud to support this important initiative that will ultimately help patients living with cardiac conditions, cancer and other chronic diseases access equitable and personalized care."

Together, Sunnybrook and TD Bank Group are inventing the future of health care.

About Sunnybrook

Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre is inventing the future of health care for the 1.3 million patients the hospital cares for each year through the dedication of its more than 10,000 staff and volunteers. An internationally recognized leader in research and education and a full affiliation with the University of Toronto distinguishes Sunnybrook as one of Canada's premier academic health sciences centres. Sunnybrook specializes in caring for high-risk pregnancies, critically ill newborns and adults, offering specialized rehabilitation, and treating and preventing cancer, cardiovascular disease, neurological and psychiatric disorders, orthopaedic and arthritic conditions and traumatic injuries. The hospital also has a unique and national leading program for the care of Canada's war veterans.

SOURCE Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre

For further information: Media contact: Samantha Sexton, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, 416.480.4040, [emailprotected]

http://www.sunnybrook.ca/foundation

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Sunnybrook launches innovative new artificial intelligence research lab with $1-million gift from TD Bank Group - Canada NewsWire