Artificial Intelligence
HIMSS24
<p>Tom Lawry's HIMSS24 sessions will focus on the realities of AI: stemming nurse burnout by ending their role as data entry clerks, and nursing informatics, says the managing director at Second Century Tech.<br />
</p>
<p>There’s a lot of hype and hope about what ChatGPT and other tools can do, says Dr. Srinivasan Suresh, VP, CIO and CMIO at UPMC Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh.<br />
</p>
HIMSS24
<p>CDS Hooks is a standard for web service that uses FHIR to represent the patient data, but it also has a standard to provide clinical decision support recommendations, says Dr. Howard Strasberg, vice president of medical informatics at Wolters Kluwer, who with Robert Jenders, professor of Medicine at UCLA will be speaking at HIMSS24.<br />
</p>
<p>Dr. Jared Saul, Amazon Web Services chief medical officer, talks about the benefits of artificial intelligence and machine learning, but also AWS' concerns about their use in healthcare.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>Physicians use a seven-day readmissions model in which they take AI risk assessment into account when discharging patients, says Luis Ahumada, director of health data science and analytics at Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital.<br />
</p>
<p>AI is being used for data summarization, audio processing and improving written reports, says Rob Luke, chief scientist at Ae Studio.<br />
</p>
<p>Hospitals within the HIMSS Southern California chapter want to know how to create and safely implement AI, with more education expected to follow from the HIMSS AI forum, says Carrie Murray, president of the HIMSS Southern California chapter.<br />
</p>
As AI expands across healthcare organizations, benefits and risks grow, according to Kodiak Solutions' annual report.
<p>Hamilton Health Sciences is focused on clinical AI at the bedside as a powerful tool, as long as it's in partnership with clinicians, says Jeremy Petch, director of digital health innovation.</p>
<p><span style="font-size:11pt"><span style="font-family:"Calibri",sans-serif"><span style="font-size:12.0pt">The transition over the last 10 years has moved from the development of AI and ML tools to a focus on how to get them used, says Dr. Sanjeev Bhavnani of Scripps Health.</span></span></span></p>