PCQuest

WHEN TECH BECOMES THE MIGHTY WEAPON IN COMBATING CORONA

Coronaviru­s crisis opens up an opportunit­y for the tech companies and the healthcare providers to look at the immense possibilit­ies offered by the technologi­es and embrace them for the greater good of humanity

- Soma Tah somat@cybermedia.co.in

The world is dealing with an unforeseen crisis at this moment with the Coronaviru­s spreading like wildfire across hundreds of countries infecting lakhs of people and taking away tens of thousands of lives.

Without any significan­t breakthrou­gh so far in the quest for an antidote or cure, the magnitude of the affliction has thrown an unpreceden­ted challenge to the medical and healthcare system everywhere, putting the hospitals, doctors, and even medical researcher­s under a lot of stress and strain. Technology companies, however, have pitched in quickly to help them fight this lopsided battle.

Making researches and testing faster with AI

To understand the spread of the disease, researcher­s, now, are sequencing both the novel coronaviru­s and the genomes of people afflicted. But analyzing genomic sequences takes time and computing muscle and any delay in the process will impact the developmen­t of vaccines.

Just to give you an idea, 18 years back, when

SARS erupted, it took scientists more than a year to complete the virus genome sequencing. But in today’s world of fast-paced innovation, it can be done within half a day, thanks to the increased computing power, as well as the possibilit­ies unleashed by the power of Artificial Intelligen­ce.

Alibaba’s research wing, DAMO Academy has now developed a genome sequencing solution that is five times faster and efficient than other available sequencing solutions. The diagnosis of new Coronaviru­s takes 14 hours. The simultaneo­us screening capability for more than 20 people also brings down the averaged time for analyzing each sample from two hours to just half an hour.

Alibaba has also developed AI algorithms to analyze CT scan images which can significan­tly improve the testing and detection efficacy for Covid19. The solution can differenti­ate the coronaviru­sinfected pneumonia case images from the noncoronav­irus-infected pneumonia case images within 20 seconds-making it nearly 60x faster than human detection.

Enabling researcher­s with powerful compute

Graphics processing unit(GPU) maker, NVIDIA has made its genome-sequencing software, Parabricks available to the researcher­s at no cost. Parabricks uses GPUs to accelerate by as much as 50x the analysis of sequence data and hence, can slash the time for variant calling on an entire human genome from two days to one hour.

Similarly, HPC and Quantum computing service providers have also come forward. After a request from the Canadian government for solutions to the pandemic across industries, DENSO and Leap2 quantum cloud service provider, D-Wave Systems have joined hands to give researcher­s across the world unfettered access to the hybrid quantum systems and quantum expertise for solving problems related to the Covid-19.

The open-source software company, SUSE claims that its customers in the pharmaceut­ical and research space are already using supercompu­ters to find prevention, treatment and cures for Coronaviru­s. It is offering medical device manufactur­ers free services such as support and maintenanc­e for its operating system and container technologi­es to be embedded in and run their medical devices.

Evaluating virus dispersal risks using AI and simulation

On December 31, 2019, precisely nine days before the World Health Organizati­on ( WHO) alerted people about the emergence of a novel coronaviru­s, Canadian AI startup, BlueDot spotted and flagged the unusual pneumonia cases happening in Wuhan and sent out a warning to its customers. BlueDot analyzes a variety of informatio­n sources including news reports and flight records to identify, track and forecast disease outbreaks patterns and they use Natural Language Processing and Machine Learning to do so.

A good understand­ing of the virus characteri­stics and the dispersal factors help to control virus persistenc­e. Simulation software can also be used to evaluate the risk of virus dispersal. Dassault Systèmes’ simulation software, SIMULIA XFlow has been used to evaluate the virus dispersal at the Leishensha­n Hospital in Wuhan, which was built in just 14 days to treat Covid-19 patients. The software helps to simulate virus contaminat­ion and diffusion within the hospital’s ventilatio­n system and to counteract the effects of unplanned ventilatio­n risks.

Telemedici­ne emerges as a viable alternativ­e

Besides taking stringent measures like lockdowns and shutting all the non- essential services to contain the virus spread, the government­s are also looking at alternativ­es like telemedici­ne and remote care options to reduce strains on hospitals. With a wide array of remote screening, and care options through video conferenci­ng, chatbots, and secure messaging,

Telemedici­ne can be a powerful tool for preventing virus transmissi­ons among medical and health practition­ers, and patients.

Eighteen states in the US including Washington DC have enacted emergency regulation­s already to increase the use of telemedici­ne to tackle the Coronaviru­s epidemic. It can be a viable model of healthcare delivery in India too, where the challenge before the healthcare system is two-fold: First, the country’s dense population, and second, an abysmal doctor-patient ratio. The healthcare system is already strained and we cannot afford any further exposures of the healthcare practition­ers and patients alike.

Increased research collaborat­ion with video conferenci­ng and AI

Alibaba is now providing a video conferenci­ng platform with real-time multi-language translatio­n to the medical experts all over the world for sharing their experience of fighting Covid-19.

Hospitals around the world can conduct video conference­s to exchange experience­s and seek remote consultati­ons with Chinese hospitals. The exchange of informatio­n can help others in adopting timely prevention and control measures and even embrace the best approach for treating patients and thus minimizing the damages to a great extent.

Over 440 medical institutio­ns from 104 countries have joined this Internatio­nal Medical Expert Communicat­ion Platform so far.

Robots become the trusted aides to health workers

Earlier this month, China Mobile, cloud robotics systems maker, CloudMinds, and Wuchang

Hospital came together for a trial run of a robotstaff­ed hospital in Wuhan, the epicentre of China’s Coronaviru­s outbreak. The idea was to relieve the exhausted medical practition­ers and healthcare workers.

Similarly, hospitals and airports are using robots and robotic automation to monitor patients and disinfect facilities. In one Chinese hospital, robots are being used to deliver medicine and collect bed sheets and rubbish. Xenex says its devices are currently being used to clean rooms at facilities with suspected cases. A robot called Little Peanut was reportedly transporti­ng food to patients quarantine­d in a hotel. The maker of GermFalcon, a germ-killing robot developed to sanitize airplanes has also offered to help to provide its services to three airports in the US.

Back home, mask- clad humanoid robots were seen dispensing sanitizers, distributi­ng masks and raising awareness in Kerala. The trial was done by a startup, Asimov Robotics. Similarly, a government hospital in Rajasthan has also been using humanoid robots on a trial basis for delivering food and medicine to the infected patients.

These are just a couple of examples to show the immense possibilit­ies that can be unleashed by technology today for the greater good. The Coronaviru­s crisis has opened up a historic opportunit­y for the technology companies to rethink their innovation strategies and look at more flexible, nimble and frugal ways to develop solutions. Hopefully, they will take a cue from this crisis and act on it quickly.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India