The Asian Age

An app a day keeps docs away

- K. J. JACOB

AI developers will soon be providing apps that would even predict a psychiatri­c condition based on eye movement.

Doctors, beware. It’s not just an apple a day that could keep you away but may be an app can too in this era. Healthcare informatic­s ( huge data coupled with Artificial Intelligen­ce) is making big advances and is threatenin­g to offer the patients better care than a doctor, according to a Harvard Medical School researcher. And it’s not all that away: Big daddies of the digital world such as Google and Amazon are already into it. “A computer with data on millions of scan reports will be able to make vastly superior diagnostic­s than a physician,” Dr Ajith J. Thomas told this newspaper.

“Auto diagnosis, where you talk to a computer instead of a doctor, is very much a possibilit­y. This would cost a lot of doctors their jobs but many don’t take this emerging reality with the seriousnes­s it demands,” Dr Thomas, who hails from Kottayam, said. He was in Kochi to attend the # FUTURE Global meet.

“It also means more democratis­ation of healthcare where the patient will get more focus, and not the doctor and it would be cost- effective too,” he said.

Dr Thomas, along with his Harvard team, is now associatin­g with a global technology major to set up a neuro science centre for Artificial Intelligen­ce. “We are working with the company to come up with products,” he said. However, he refused to elaborate on the project.

“The two big overarchin­g themes in medical research now are molecular biology, genetics and genomics that directly help a doctor offer better solution to the patient, he said. “Then we have digital technology which can generate informatio­n,” he said. “Here, the data, big data, is analysed with the help of Artificial Intelligen­ce. There will be layers of data- lab data, image data etc. Then you need an intermedia­ry to put them in layers for the doctor. Such products, such as apps, could be used even by a patient,” Dr Thomas explained. For example, he said, an app that can predict a psychiatri­c condition based on eye movement will be possible. A push for healthcare informatic­s started in the early ’ 70s but it lost its steam in the succeeding decades.

“It is now back to change the way we approach healthcare,” he said. “This developmen­t offers big opportunit­ies for start- ups. There are more than 1,000 start- ups in Boston alone working in the sector,” he said. “Kerala is a fertile ground for start- ups to work in the field because Keralites have great awareness on health and technology penetratio­n is quite high here. All that lacks here is data, and companies can work on it,” Dr Ajith J. Thomas said.

“The government can step in to ensure that the data b e c o m e s inter- operable. It can either be held by the hospital or the patient but should be available for the doctor whomsoever the patient seeks for advice,” he said.

A PUSH FOR INFORMATIC­S IS ON TO CHANGE THE WAY WE APPROACH HEALTHCARE.

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