Artificial Intelligence
Dr. Peter Bonis, chief medical officer at Wolters Kluwer Health, says building trust in AI tools, at the enterprise level and end user level, depends on effective EHR integration and models that work.
It's not enough to just mitigate implicit bias: AI tools should be harnessed promote access for the underserved, says Dr. Antoine Keller, cardiothoracic surgeon at Ochsner Lafayette Hospital, who highlights a portable diagnostics tool that's helping.
Dr. Sonya Makhni, medical director of applied informatics at Mayo Clinic Platform, says providers want assurances that artificial intelligence tools are useful, transparent, explainable and secure.
Michael Pencina, director of Duke AI Health, sees big potential but also fundamental challenges as providers try to figure out what tools to use, where and when to use them, and for what purposes.
Ran Balicer, CIO of Israel's Clalit Health Services, says leaders feeling pressured to adopt new AI tools should have a specific use case in mind and assess the readiness of their existing IT infrastructure and data.
Whether a health system is in the early stage or advanced maturity affects how they view the technology, says HIMSS senior market insights manager Nicole Ramage, who highlights new research.
HIMSS senior director of informatics strategy Rob Havasy says that, even as it evolves at a rapid pace, the policies around AI are coming into focus, and providers are getting more comfortable integrating AI into their workflows.
Providence Chief of Virtual Care and Digital Health Dr. Eve Cunningham offers advice and best practices for using automation and ambient voice to help alleviate burden and bring joy back to medicine.
Atlantic Health System Chief Information & Digital Officer Sunil Dadlani explains how AI and security "aren't mutually exclusive, they're mutually inclusive."
Dr. Traci Granston, medical director at Cohere, describes how information is extracted in real time, speeding the process to approve or to ensure medical necessity is met.