john jones
Data sets, fraud, and the future « Jon Rappoport's Blog
Right off the bat, here is a scene from the near-future: AI takes a look at John Jones' medical records, does instant collating, and comes up with a disease diagnosis. Via Zoom, the doctor's AI assistant slaps on a diagnosis, and an hour later, two bottles of medical drugs arrive at Jones' door. One problem: the data set assembled by AI is preposterous. Jones' so-called symptoms don't add up to a disease. Only in another data set, held by the CDC, do the symptoms require a disease-label.
Entity Extraction Automates the Redaction of Employee Surveys
Employee surveys are a useful tool in an organization's toolbox for gaining greater understanding of employees' attitudes towards all aspects of a business. Of course, surveys are also used to analyze employee morale and the workplace environment. They may even broach issues of misconduct, whether due to sexual harassment in this age of #MeToo or to more general issues of managerial abuse of employees, favoritism, or anything that comes under the rubric of a hostile work environment. Of course, many employees feel that responding to even an anonymous survey will expose them to potential retaliation. For that reason companies frequently bring in a third party to administer the surveys and analyze the results.
Specialized Explanations for Dosage Selection
When GENTAMICIN is given for MENINGITIS, the recommended dosage is: if age is 2 yrs then 1.7 mg/kg q8h IV plus consider giving 5 mg q24h IT, else 2.3 mg/kg q8h IV plus consider giving 2.5-4 rag/day IT. The normal dose for John Jones is: 119 mg (3.0 ml, 80mg/2ml ampule) q8h [calculated on the basis of 1.7 mg/kg] plus consider giving 5 mg q24h IT GENTAMICIN is excreted by the kidneys, so its dosage must be modified in renal failure. The following table shows how the patient's renal function was determined: Identifier Value Definition SCR1 1.9 the most recent serum creatinine (mg/100ml) SCR2 1.8 the previous serum creatinine (mg/100ml) CCr(f) 42.7 estimated creatinine clearance, adjusted for normal body surface area (ml/min/1.73