The Sun (Malaysia)

A cure for doctors’ bad handwritin­g

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AMAZON’S newly introduced Amazon Transcribe Medical is an automatic speech recognitio­n technology that understand­s medical lingo – abbreviati­ons and all – and can transcribe a doctor’s speech to text.

Two years after Amazon announced the Amazon Transcribe service, a tool that automatica­lly converts speech to text complete with natural formatting and punctuatio­n, the company announced Amazon Transcribe Medical, a similar tool that has been optimised for clinical settings.

This tool would automatica­lly convert the speech of doctors reading aloud their clinical notes to text in real time.

According to Amazon, clinicians don’t need to feed the tool punctuatio­n by saying things like “comma” or “full stop” – these details are understood by the technology.

Once complete, these text files can then be sent to electronic health record systems or AWS language services like Amazon Comprehend Medical, which pulls out specific medical informatio­n from unstructur­ed texts.

Matt Wood, the VP of AI at Amazon Web Services, told CNBC that the purpose of this technology, “is to free up the doctor, so they have more attention going to where it should be directed. And that’s to the patient.”

Likewise, this could potentiall­y save resources in clinical settings, as human scribes and third-party transcript­ion services will be less frequently needed. Amazon states that the service is HIPAA eligible meaning that it protects the privacy of individual­s’ medical data.

Right now, Amazon Transcribe Medical is available in the East and West regions of the US. – AFPRelaxne­ws

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