According to Statista, the artificial intelligence (AI) healthcare market, valued at $11 billion in 2021, is projected to be worth $187 billion in 2030. That massive increase means we will likely continue to see considerable changes in how medical providers, hospitals, pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies, and others in the healthcare industry operate.
Healthcare
organizations are using AI to improve the efficiency of all kinds of processes,
from back-office tasks to patient care. The following are some examples of how
AI could be used to benefit staff and patients:
Healthcare
workers spend a lot of time doing paperwork and other administrative tasks. AI
and automation can help perform many of those mundane tasks, freeing up
employee time for other activities and giving them more face-to-face time with
patients. For example, generative AI can help clinicians with note-taking and
content summarization that can help keep medical records as thorough as
possible. AI could also help with accurate coding and sharing of information
between departments and billing.
Virtual
nursing assistants:
One study found
that 64% of patients are comfortable with the use of AI for around-the-clock
access to answers that support nurses provide. AI virtual nurse
assistants—which are AI-powered chatbots, apps or other interfaces—can be used
to help answer questions about medications, forward reports to doctors or
surgeons and help patients schedule a visit with a physician. These sorts of
routine tasks can help take work off the hands of clinical staff, who can then
spend more time directly on patient care, where human judgment and interaction
matter most.
Dosage error
reduction:
AI could be
used to help identify errors in how a patient self-administers medications. One
example comes from a study in Nature Medicine, which found that up to 70% of
patients don’t take insulin as prescribed. An AI-powered tool that sits in the
patient’s background (much like a Wi-Fi router) could be used to flag errors in
how the patient administers an insulin pen or inhaler.
Less invasive
surgeries: AI-enabled robots could be used to work around sensitive organs and
tissues to help reduce blood loss, infection risk and post-surgery pain.
Fraud
prevention:
Fraud in the
healthcare industry is enormous, at $380 billion/year, and raises the cost of
consumers’ medical premiums and out-of-pocket expenses. Implementing AI can
help recognize unusual or suspicious patterns in insurance claims, such as
billing for costly services or procedures not performed, unbundling (which is
billing for the individual steps of a procedure as though they were separate
procedures), and performing unnecessary tests to take advantage of insurance
payments.
A recent study
found that 83% of patients report poor communication as the worst part of their
experience, demonstrating a strong need for clearer communication between
patients and providers. AI technologies like natural language processing (NLP),
predictive analytics and speech recognition could help healthcare providers
have more effective communication with patients. AI could, for instance,
deliver more specific information about a patient’s treatment options, allowing
the healthcare provider to have more meaningful conversations with the patient
for shared decision-making.
According to
Harvard’s School of Public Health, although it’s early days for this use, using
AI to make diagnoses may reduce treatment costs by up to 50% and improve health
outcomes by 40%.
As health and
fitness monitors become more popular and more people use apps that track and
analyze details about their health, they can share these real-time data sets
with their doctors to monitor health issues and provide alerts in case of
problems.
One benefit the
use of AI brings to health systems is making gathering and sharing information
easier. AI can help providers keep track of patient data more efficiently.
As AI becomes
more important in healthcare delivery and more AI medical applications are
developed, ethical and regulatory governance must be established. Issues that
raise concern include the possibility of bias, lack of transparency, privacy
concerns regarding data used for training AI models, and safety and liability
issues.
· 1- Protecting autonomy
· 2- Promoting human safety and well-being
· 3- Ensuring transparency
· 3- Fostering accountability
· 5-Ensuring equity
The WHO report
also provides recommendations that ensure governing AI for healthcare both
maximizes the technology’s promise and holds healthcare workers accountable and
responsive to the communities and people they work with.
Future and
potential of AI in the healthcare ecosystem
AI provides
opportunities to help reduce human error, assist medical professionals and
staff, and provide patient services 24/7. As AI tools continue to develop,
there is potential to use AI even more in reading medical images, X-rays and
scans, diagnosing medical problems and creating treatment plans.
AI applications
will continue to help streamline various tasks, from answering phones to
analyzing population health trends (and, likely, applications yet to be
considered). For instance, future AI tools may automate or augment more of the
work of clinicians and staff members. That will free up humans to spend more
time on more effective and compassionate face-to-face professional care.
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