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Deep medicine : how artificial intelligence can make healthcare human again

By: Publication details: New York : Basic Books, 2019Description: xiii, 378pISBN:
  • 9781541644632
Subject(s): NLM classification:
  • W 61.
Summary: A visit to a physician these days is cold: physicians spend most of their time typing at computers, making minimal eye contact. Appointments generally last only a few minutes, with scarce time for the doctor to connect to a patient's story, or explain how and why different procedures and treatments might be undertaken. As a result, errors abound: indeed, misdiagnosis is the fourth-leading cause of death in the United States, trailing only heart disease, cancer, and stroke. This is because, despite having access to more resources than ever, doctors are vulnerable not just to the economic demand to see more patients, but to distraction, burnout, data overload, and their own intrinsic biases. Physicians are simply overmatched. As Eric Topol argues in Deep Medicine, artificial intelligence can help. Natural-language processing could automatically record notes from our doctor visits; virtual psychiatrists could better predict the risk of suicide or other mental health issues for vulnerable patients; deep-learning software will make every physician a master diagnostician; and we could even use smartphone apps to take our own medical "selfies" for skin exams and receive immediate analysis. . On top of that, the virtual smartphone assistants of today - Alexa, Siri, Cortana, could analyze our daily health data to reduce the need for doctor visits and trips to the emergency room, and support for people suffering from asthma, epilepsy, and heart disease. By integrating tools like these into their daily medical practice, doctors would be able to spend less time collecting and cataloging information, and more time providing thorough, intimate, and meaningful care for their patients, as no machine can.
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Item type Home library Class number Status Date due Barcode
Book CEME Library (NELFT) Shelves QA139 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) In transit from Croydon Health Services Library to CEME Library (NELFT) since 18/10/2023 NE14230
Book Newcomb Library at Homerton Healthcare Shelves W 26.5 TOP (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 17217
Book PRUH Education Centre Library Shelves W 61 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available B04827
Book Royal London Library (Barts Health) Shelves QA 139 TOP (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available N05566
Book St Bartholomew's Library (Barts Health) Shelves QA 139 TOP (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available T06625
Book Whipps Cross Library (Barts Health) Shelves QA 139 TOP (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available T06626

A visit to a physician these days is cold: physicians spend most of their time typing at computers, making minimal eye contact. Appointments generally last only a few minutes, with scarce time for the doctor to connect to a patient's story, or explain how and why different procedures and treatments might be undertaken. As a result, errors abound: indeed, misdiagnosis is the fourth-leading cause of death in the United States, trailing only heart disease, cancer, and stroke. This is because, despite having access to more resources than ever, doctors are vulnerable not just to the economic demand to see more patients, but to distraction, burnout, data overload, and their own intrinsic biases. Physicians are simply overmatched.
As Eric Topol argues in Deep Medicine, artificial intelligence can help. Natural-language processing could automatically record notes from our doctor visits; virtual psychiatrists could better predict the risk of suicide or other mental health issues for vulnerable patients; deep-learning software will make every physician a master diagnostician; and we could even use smartphone apps to take our own medical "selfies" for skin exams and receive immediate analysis. . On top of that, the virtual smartphone assistants of today - Alexa, Siri, Cortana, could analyze our daily health data to reduce the need for doctor visits and trips to the emergency room, and support for people suffering from asthma, epilepsy, and heart disease. By integrating tools like these into their daily medical practice, doctors would be able to spend less time collecting and cataloging information, and more time providing thorough, intimate, and meaningful care for their patients, as no machine can.

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