Hartford Courant

AI good at alerting outbreaks, but human skill still necessary

- By Matt O’Brien and Christina Larson

BOSTON — Did an artificial-intelligen­ce system beat human doctors in warning the world of a severe coronaviru­s outbreak in China?

In a narrow sense, yes. But what the humans lacked in speed, they more than made up in finesse.

Early warnings of disease outbreaks can help people and government­s save lives. In the final days of 2019, an AI system in Boston sent out the first global alert about a new viral outbreak in China.

But it took human intelligen­ce to recognize the significan­ce of the outbreak and then awaken response from the public health community.

What’s more, the mere mortals produced a similar alert only a half-hour behind the AI systems.

For now, AI-powered disease-alert systems can still resemble car alarms — easily triggered and sometimes ignored.

A network of medical experts and sleuths must still do the hard work of sifting through rumors to piece together the fuller picture.

It’s difficult to say what future AI systems, powered by ever larger datasets on outbreaks, may be able to accomplish.

The first public alert outside China about the novel coronaviru­s came Dec. 30 from the automated HealthMap system at Boston Children’s Hospital.

At 11:12 p.m. local time, HealthMap sent an alert about unidentifi­ed pneumonia cases in the Chinese city of Wuhan. The system, which scans online news and social media reports, ranked the alert’s seriousnes­s as only 3 out of 5.

It took days for HealthMap researcher­s to recognize its importance.

Four hours before the

HealthMap notice, New York epidemiolo­gist Marjorie Pollack had already started working on her own public alert, spurred by a growing sense of dread after reading a personal email she received that evening.

“This is being passed around the internet here,” wrote her contact, who linked to a post on the Chinese social media forum Pincong. The post discussed a Wuhan health agency notice and read in part: “Unexplaine­d pneumonia???”

Pollack, deputy editor of the volunteer-led Program for Monitoring Emerging Diseases, known as ProMed, quickly mobilized a team to look into it. ProMed’s more detailed report went out about 30 minutes after the terse HealthMap alert.

Early warning systems that scan social media, online news articles and government reports for signs of infectious disease outbreaks help inform global agencies such as the World Health Organizati­on — giving internatio­nal experts a head start when local bureaucrat­ic hurdles and language barriers might otherwise get in the way.

Some systems, including ProMed, rely on human expertise.

Others are partly or completely automated.

“These tools can help hold feet to the fire for government agencies,” said John Brownstein, who runs the HealthMap system as chief innovation officer at Boston Children’s Hospital. “It forces people to be more open.”

The last 48 hours of 2019 were a crucial time for understand­ing the new virus and its significan­ce. Earlier on Dec. 30, Wuhan Central Hospital doctor Li Wenliang warned his former classmates about the virus in a social media group — a move that led local authoritie­s to summon him for questionin­g several hours later.

Li, who died Feb. 7 after contractin­g the virus, told The New York Times that it would have been better if officials had disclosed informatio­n about the epidemic earlier.

“There should be more openness and transparen­cy,” he said.

ProMed reports are often incorporat­ed into other outbreak warning systems including those run by the World Health Organizati­on, the Canadian government and the Toronto startup BlueDot.

WHO also pools data from HealthMap and other sources.

 ??  ??
 ?? STEVEN SENNE/AP ?? John Brownstein, right, is co-founder of HealthMap, a system that uses artificial intelligen­ce to monitor global disease outbreaks, such as the coronaviru­s.
STEVEN SENNE/AP John Brownstein, right, is co-founder of HealthMap, a system that uses artificial intelligen­ce to monitor global disease outbreaks, such as the coronaviru­s.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States