We asked our team how they think AI will continue to transform the healthcare industry in 2025, and the innovations they see on the horizon. Matt Doxey envisions AI driving improvements in everything from radiology backlogs to seamless provider hand-offs, creating new opportunities for equity and efficiency. What problems do you think AI will solve next year? Share your thoughts below!
AI will change the world of health in various aspects. we are working on some of this capabilities.
Take steps in the right direction—AI must become an integral part of the daily operations in every radiology department. It's time to develop a clear and actionable plan!
First base access to Health Care for persons or communities that are out of the system
This is amazing. AI is revolutionising Health.
These 2 will help with great pain for doctors: - AI ambient scribe - Shift hand-off But I see a lot of value in document processing as well!
Ai in diagnosis gonna be powerful
Digital Transformation & Analytics | MBA in Marketing & Analytics
10hDepends on how diligently fervently and proactively it's progress is pursued it's unrivaled delivering of what simply otherwise is impossible with floors eclipsing peaks and propagated are the expansive + feedback loops and propagation with adoption As baselines the radiology differentiations transform windows and dynamics shifting so called "no benefit" interventions to testament to just how misleading wrong and costly past practices were and the damage done by such marauding as so called data driven best practices. Now - unless leveraging constellations, integrating measures calculations measures automatically processing their ratios and shifts as functions of time relative to eachother and temporally,not leveraging patterns comprising patterns not paving and pioneering proxies On and on - clear solid framework to potentiate at scale prognoses and metrics across the map that matter simply not scientifically possible absent it's usage jeesh so many blowout potentiations With aidoptions accelerating given the indisputable not otherwise achievable deliveries and recognition of tradeoffs and opportunity costs probably will see malpractice firms etc pursuing patterns and presentations where "just look at little closer it's ther"