AI Gets Into The Fight With COVID-19

#artificialintelligence 

Recent surveys, studies, forecasts and other quantitative assessments of AI highlight the role AI plays in fighting the Coronavirus, the business impact of AI, and what the American public feels about it. UC San Diego Health developed and applied an artificial intelligence algorithm to more than 2,000 lung X-ray images, helping radiologists more quickly identify signs of early pneumonia in Covid-19 patients [Becker's Hospital Review] Mayo Clinic teamed up with the state's health department to create an artificial intelligence-powered tool that can identify zones of greater Covid-19 transmission in southern Minnesota [Becker's Hospital Review] The FluSense model, developed by researchers at University of Massachusetts Amherst, was tested in campus clinic waiting rooms. The AI platform was able to analyze coughing sounds and crowd size collected by the handheld device in real-time, then use that data to accurately predict daily illness rates in each clinic [Becker's Hospital Review] The Rambam Hospital in Haifa, Israel, has begun a clinical trial of Cordio Medical's app-based AI system that analyzes speech to diagnose and remotely monitor Covid-19 patients [VentureBeat] Kentucky-based Baptist Health is using an AI platform from remote-patient-monitoring startup Current Health Ltd. to track about 20 Covid-19 patients [WSJ] AI startup SparkBeyond will assist Argentina in looking at how the country can allow citizens to return to work and minimize economic impact. The platform will use data from the Argentinian ministry of health, which aggregates travel, demographic and employment data for each citizen, then integrates hundreds of external data sources to create a wider picture of the situation. It is an area where any country, even countries as big as China and the United States, will find it challenging to achieve the necessary scale of data--from tens to hundreds of millions of humans--to train machine-learning applications that generate robust insights into health and disease.

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