Enabling digital enterprise for healthcare

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Enabling digital enterprise for healthcare

Published: Thu 6 Feb 2020, 7:36 PM

Last updated: Thu 6 Feb 2020, 9:43 PM

The healthcare industry today faces many challenges: the growth and aging of global populations, escalating costs, growing complexity. Health systems are facing margin pressures and are looking to technology to help drive breakthroughs in patient outcomes, improve operational and clinical productivity, and find new areas of growth. It is also becoming abundantly clear that Artificial Intelligence (AI) and analytics will be the game changers that will drive positive outcomes for patients as well as providers, caregivers and other stakeholders across the health ecosystem.
One significant asset that the health ecosystems has is the availability of data because of the digitization of patient records, archival imaging data, digital pathology - as well as the availability of genomic and radionomic information. Adding to that is much of the information across the social spectrum and patient-centric information from connected devices and wearables. This multi-dimensional as well as multi-modality information within and outside of health systems needs to be aggregated in a way that lends itself to analytics and deep learning algorithms. These applications also need to be integrated seamlessly into existing workflows and care areas to provide real value to clinicians.
The data in health systems and in social domain, exists in disparate forms, in different locations and across different systems, leading to siloed and fragmented information. This makes it challenging to contextualise the patient longitudinal information as well as horizontal knowledge base within health systems, acquired over decades of work and bring it to bear at the point of care.
They try to cobble together these systems, but our customers tell us they need a true partner to help them leverage data, software and analytics across their entire business, bringing together a connected, digital enterprise.
That's why GE Healthcare is making significant investments aggregating data and in applying AI and analytics to healthcare data to uncover insights that improve patient outcomes, reduce waste and inefficiencies, and eliminate costly and harmful errors. We are also integrating these technologies into our leading imaging and monitoring equipment. Bringing together medical device and digital capabilities, the clinical and domain knowledge, combined with our deep relationships and long history in the healthcare industry, gives us a unique role to play in driving the future of health around the world.
We created Edison - GE Healthcare's intelligence platform designed specifically for the needs of healthcare - in part to help solve these challenges and help our customers stitch together various digital technologies, data across the health systems and devices, to drive care area solutions.
Over the next few years, we expect the platform to become central to the healthcare ecosystem and an important hub for innovation with thousands of applications and healthcare services available. While there is no shortage of projections on what a healthier world looks like thanks to more precise, predictive, prescriptive, efficient and preventative care, we are already making tangible progress toward that vision.
With our clinical command centers, we give health systems the capability to anticipate, detect and mitigate risk in real time, complementing other performance improvement tools. Command centers are multi-purpose, scalable and evolve over time. Humber River Hospital in Toronto launched the world's first clinical analytic applications or "tiles" inside of a hospital command center to revolutionize the patient experience and bring a new standard of patient-centered quality healthcare.
And in September, we received the first FDA clearance for Critical Care Suite, an AI-powered X-ray system used to analyze X-ray images to detect the potentially fatal condition pneumothorax, more commonly known as collapsed lung. The system flags any cases that need immediate attention, so clinicians can prioritize these patients and avoid any further health complications.
These are just a few examples of what data, analytics and AI is already enabling today - but it is just the beginning of what technology can deliver. Our efforts are advancing intelligent health - using advanced device and digital technologies to drive better patient and clinical outcomes across care areas and enhancing the efficiency and productivity of healthcare systems around the world.
- Amit Phadnis, chief digital officer at GE Healthcare. Views expressed here are his own and do not reflect newspaper's policy

By Amit Phadnis

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