{"id":3391,"date":"2018-11-22T10:55:09","date_gmt":"2018-11-22T10:55:09","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.microsoft.com\/en-gb\/industry\/blog\/?p=3391"},"modified":"2019-03-21T11:24:35","modified_gmt":"2019-03-21T11:24:35","slug":"maximising-the-ai-opportunity-in-healthcare","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.microsoft.com\/en-gb\/industry\/blog\/health\/2018\/11\/22\/maximising-the-ai-opportunity-in-healthcare\/","title":{"rendered":"Maximising the AI opportunity in healthcare"},"content":{"rendered":"
I saw it in action at Future Decoded<\/a>, standing side-by-side with our NHS customers. We share a common goal: putting the patient at the centre of what we do. We also want to empower employees to completely transform the way care is delivered and managed.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n 43 percent of healthcare employees are sceptical about the use of AI in healthcare<\/a>. But used correctly, it can improve patient care, accessibility, and make it easier for employees to do their work.<\/p>\n \u201cAI will have a big impact on healthcare, which affects everyone. Costs in the sector are growing, so the positive potential for introducing AI is huge,\u201d says Chris Bishop, Microsoft Research Cambridge Labs Director. \u201cThere are so many opportunities and it doesn\u2019t have to be big or complex; it can be as simple as gathering data.\u201d<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Implementing change in healthcare can seem quite daunting. Neil Sebire, Consultant Pathologist, Chief Research Information Officer and Director of DRIVE at Great Ormond Street Hospital<\/a> sums it up pretty well: \u201cYou can\u2019t shut the hospital to replace all your technology. It\u2019s like saying to someone we need you to change the engine in this aeroplane, but we can\u2019t land.\u201d<\/p>\n To create this change, start small. How much time are your practitioners spending on backend work that can be automated?<\/p>\n At the Future Decoded AI in Healthcare panel, Thoughtonomy<\/a> Head of Public Sector, Phil Sheen<\/a> talked about automation. \u201cLook at areas within the organisation that require little cognitive process,\u201d he says. \u201cIt helps overcome cultural barriers and demystifies AI.\u201d<\/p>\n Implementing automation at the East Suffolk and North Essex NHS Foundation Trust<\/a> showed how AI can support clinical and operational workers in healthcare. Within the first three months over 500 hours of medical securities\u2019 time was saved, and they\u2019re expected to save over \u00a3200,000 by July 2019.<\/p>\n AI also can aid accessibility in healthcare. The NHS has an accessibility standard built into it, which essentially says that all patients have the same right to access information that anyone else would have. Microsoft Azure Cognitive Services<\/a> allow NHS Trusts to make their own data and patient information more accessible. Seeing AI<\/a>, an app developed by Microsoft aids people who are vision impaired with their day-to-day lives.<\/p>\n Hector Minto, Technical Evangelist at Microsoft explained the relevance of this technology for healthcare. \u201cSeeing AI could read prescription data for a patient, recognise carers, and read bar codes to identify the correct medication. All the individual channels used in the app are simply bits of code that can be used by developers to deliver accessible experiences for people with disabilities in healthcare. This is an invitation for people to look at AI and how they would like to use it to improve the patient experience, including employees with disabilities within the NHS.\u201d<\/p>\n Also at the AI in Healthcare panel were Emily Crossley, co-founder at Duchenne UK<\/a> and Dr Elin Haf Davies, founder of Aparito<\/a>.<\/p>\n \u201cIn today\u2019s world we\u2019re always talking about personalised medicine. But nobody is really talking about or investing in how we\u2019re going to do the personalised monitoring that will allow us to actually get towards that,\u201d explains Haf Davies.<\/p>\n They discussed their mission to have patients and their families use a phone-based app to provide information about themselves and when they take medication.<\/p>\n \u201cPatient generated data is all the data a patient can share with us between hospital visits. We know that hospital-based appointments only capture 1-3 percent of a patient\u2019s experience. Therefore, there\u2019s a huge amount of data, experience, and a journey that patients go through that we don\u2019t even capture. Our technology has been designed to fill that gap and develop what we call digital biomarkers.\u201d<\/p>\n This data, along with data collected from wearables, will power clinical research and inform clinicians about what\u2019s happening to the patient.<\/p>\n It\u2019s clear to see how, when done right, AI can make positive changes to the way healthcare is provided.<\/p>\n Microsoft has been working with Leeds Teaching Hospitals on their bid to expand a digital pathology and AI programme across the North of England as an exemplar for the NHS. In the days following Future Decoded, we were delighted to find out that the bid was successful. As a result they\u2019ve been awarded a \u00a310.1m investment from UK Research and Innovation. The successful partnership bid embraces a network of nine NHS hospitals, seven universities, and 10 industry-leading medical technology companies, including Microsoft.<\/p>\n It will be fascinating to see this project unfold, and I look forward to revealing more moving forward.<\/p>\n Maximising the AI opportunity<\/a><\/p>\n See some of the other ways we’re improving lives with technology<\/a><\/p>\n Explore AI for Good\u00a0<\/a><\/p>\n
\nTechnology is changing so quickly. Since joining Microsoft four years ago, I\u2019ve seen it grown so much \u2013 not just in business, either. I often get asked the same question by nurses and clinicians: \u201cWhat does Microsoft do<\/em> in healthcare?\u201d<\/p>\nStart small<\/h2>\n
AI for accessibility<\/h2>\n
The power of data<\/h2>\n
Find out more<\/h2>\n
About the author<\/h2>\n