prostate cancer foundation
Patient-Centered RAG for Oncology Visit Aid Following the Ottawa Decision Guide
Liu, Siyang, An, Lawrence Chin-I, Mihalcea, Rada
Effective communication is essential in cancer care, yet patients often face challenges in preparing for complex medical visits. We present an interactive, Retrieval-augmented Generation-assisted system that helps patients progress from uninformed to visit-ready. Our system adapts the Ottawa Personal Decision Guide into a dynamic retrieval-augmented generation workflow, helping users bridge knowledge gaps, clarify personal values and generate useful questions for their upcoming visits. Focusing on localized prostate cancer, we conduct a user study with patients and a clinical expert. Results show high system usability (UMUX Mean = 6.0 out of 7), strong relevance of generated content (Mean = 6.7 out of 7), minimal need for edits, and high clinical faithfulness (Mean = 6.82 out of 7). This work demonstrates the potential of combining patient-centered design with language models to enhance clinical preparation in oncology care.
- North America > United States > Michigan > Washtenaw County > Ann Arbor (0.05)
- North America > United States > Maryland > Montgomery County > Bethesda (0.04)
- Africa (0.04)
- Questionnaire & Opinion Survey (1.00)
- Research Report > New Finding (0.89)
Toward a disease-sniffing device that rivals a dog's nose
Numerous studies have shown that trained dogs can detect many kinds of disease -- including lung, breast, ovarian, bladder, and prostate cancers, and possibly Covid-19 -- simply through smell. In some cases, involving prostate cancer for example, the dogs had a 99 percent success rate in detecting the disease by sniffing patients' urine samples. But it takes time to train such dogs, and their availability and time is limited. Scientists have been hunting for ways of automating the amazing olfactory capabilities of the canine nose and brain, in a compact device. Now, a team of researchers at MIT and other institutions has come up with a system that can detect the chemical and microbial content of an air sample with even greater sensitivity than a dog's nose.
- North America > United States > Massachusetts > Middlesex County > Cambridge (0.40)
- North America > United States > Texas (0.05)
- North America > United States > Maryland (0.05)
- Europe > United Kingdom > England > Buckinghamshire > Milton Keynes (0.05)
Artificial Intelligence Powers a Disease-Sniffing Device That Rivals a Dog's Nose
Andreas Mershin visits with one of the trained disease-sniffing dogs in his office at MIT. The dogs are trained and handled in the UK by the organization Medical Detection Dogs. Trained dogs can detect cancer and other diseases by smell. A miniaturized detector can analyze trace molecules to mimic the process. Numerous studies have shown that trained dogs can detect many kinds of disease -- including lung, breast, ovarian, bladder, and prostate cancers, and possibly Covid-19 -- simply through smell.
- North America > United States > Texas (0.05)
- North America > United States > Maryland (0.05)
- Europe > United Kingdom > England > Greater London > London (0.05)
- Europe > United Kingdom > England > Buckinghamshire > Milton Keynes (0.05)