The transformative potential of AI in healthcare - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
人工智能

The transformative potential of AI in healthcare

Accelerating the technology’s safe adoption in hospitals should be a priority

As recent FT analysis highlights, corporate America may be waxing lyrical about the promise of artificial intelligence but few boardrooms appear able to describe how the technology is actually changing their businesses for the better. There is, however, one sector where the gains are clear, even if it is less eye-catching to profit-chasing investors: public health. For an industry with intensely high demands on accuracy and efficiency, generative AI could transform healthcare delivery and patient outcomes. In turn, the potential benefits for society, the economy and stretched public budgets are immense.

The greatest payback from AI may well come from the earlier and more accurate detection of life-threatening illnesses. In June, Microsoft claimed it had built a diagnostic medical tool that was four times more successful than doctors at determining complex ailments. Some models may even be powerful enough to ascertain distant health risks. Last month, scientists using the gen-AI system Delphi-2M, which was built at the European Molecular Biology Laboratory in Cambridge and trained on large-scale health records, reported that it could predict susceptibility to more than 1,000 diseases decades into the future.

But AI’s impact extends well beyond preventive support. In hospitals, the technology can rapidly analyse X-rays, CAT scans and MRIs. Robotic surgery systems powered by AI can improve surgical precision. Labs are harnessing large language models to accelerate drug discovery too. Crucially, all these applications complement health professionals and free them to provide better care to more patients.

Less glamorous but equally significant is AI’s ability to cut administrative burdens. The US-based Commonwealth Fund estimates that paperwork costs, linked in part to onerous insurance checks, could account for about 30 per cent of America’s excess per capita health spending compared with other nations. In surgeries and hospitals, speech-processing technologies can also be used to transcribe conversations with patients, create structured medical notes and draft letters. A recent study by London’s Great Ormond Street Hospital found a more than 50 per cent reduction in documentation time for clinicians using so-called ambient voice technologies.

Clearly, accelerating AI adoption should be a priority for governments worldwide. Ageing populations and the growing prevalence of chronic diseases in advanced economies are contributing to rising healthcare costs. This strains already stretched public budgets and makes it harder for individuals to afford private cover, as the ongoing wrangling between Republicans and Democrats over insurance support reflects. The World Health Organization also projects a shortage of around 11mn healthcare workers by 2030, which will be more pronounced in lower and middle-income countries. As the Covid-19 pandemic demonstrated, a healthier international population helps reduce the spread of disease, benefiting everyone.

For all the upsides, the use of AI in healthcare is still nascent and patchy. This is partly because the technology is still developing, and rigorous testing is needed before its widespread use in medicine. Health professionals need to train with it too. Data privacy concerns, fragmented sharing networks and outdated IT systems add further complications. Managers can also be reticent over introducing AI where staff may feel their jobs are under threat, or in private systems where revenue depends on high service volumes.

A concerted push from governments, health regulators and tech companies is needed to help fund, trial and deploy AI applications in hospitals, and overcome the cultural and technical implementation obstacles. This will not be easy, but the scale of the prize — in the form of healthier populations and more sustainable healthcare systems — ought to focus the minds.

版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

深度求索计划大规模招聘,加剧中国人工智能人才争夺战

招聘岗位显示,该公司正专注于前沿研究成果的商业化。

世界杯表现抢眼,挪威掀起维京划船仪式热潮

多名议员和王室成员加入走红的划船潮流,挪威男足在自1998年以来首次亮相世界杯之际凭借连胜确保晋级。

点亮世界杯的久旱群岛

小国佛得角先后战平乌拉圭和欧洲冠军西班牙,只需再拿一分即可出线。

我们都需要补水时间吗?

只有通过被强制安排、井然有序却毫无乐趣的休息,我们才能最大限度发挥工作的效益。

“DeepMind帮”如何把AI热潮带到伦敦

英国科技行业一片火热,但它能否超越美国海外前哨的角色?

英伟达金伯莉•鲍威尔:我们正在重塑医生体验

这家芯片制造商负责医疗健康业务的负责人认为,AI能缓解该领域的诸多问题,包括减轻医务人员的工作负担以及应对专业人才短缺。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×