Artificial intelligence (AI) is transforming the way we interact, consume information, and obtain goods and services across industries. In health care, AI is already changing the patient experience, how clinicians practice medicine, and how the pharmaceutical industry operates. The journey has just begun.
As AI finds its way into everything from our smartphones to the supply chain, applications in health care fall into three broad groupings1:
The future of AI in health care could include tasks that range from simple to complex—everything from answering the phone to medical record review, population health trending and analytics, therapeutic drug and device design, reading radiology images, making clinical diagnoses and treatment plans, and even talking with patients.
The future of artificial intelligence in health care presents:
1 Laura Craft, Emerging Applications of Ai for Healthcare Providers, GARTNER, June 30 2017, accessed June 24, 2019
From patient self-service to chat bots, computer-aided detection (CAD) systems for diagnosis, and image data analysis to identify candidate molecules in drug discovery, AI is already at work increasing convenience and efficiency, reducing costs and errors, and generally making it easier for more patients to receive the health care they need.
While NLP and ML are already being used in health care, they will become increasingly important for their potential to:
While each AI technology can contribute significant value alone, the larger potential lies in the synergies generated by using them together across the entire patient journey, from diagnoses, to treatment, to ongoing health maintenance.
Based on our work with clients on applications of AI in health care, we offer these insights:
Health care providers can prepare for the inevitable changes related to the future of AI in health care with the following key considerations.
Develop analytics teams to leverage as much information from patients, providers, and other populations to enhance provider care and operations. Since many decisions—business and clinical—will be based on this data, create the culture and processes to promote clean, complete, and timely data. Be open to new ideas and look to other industries for inspiration.
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