- Jeff Grainger
Artificial intelligence (AI) is increasingly being used in health care settings, but it won’t replace your doctor, Victor Herrera, MD, chief clinical officer of the Central Florida Division, told the Orlando Sentinel.
“We are not trying to replace people’s thinking. We’re just trying to enhance it,” Dr. Herrera said. “There is always a physician, a nurse, a licensed professional [who] is ultimately making the decision.”
AdventHealth is using AI in more than 40 different ways, each one of which has been reviewed and approved by an advisory board that takes patient safety and privacy into account before approving technology for use. The board includes top health care professionals along with industry experts to help vet each program before it’s put into use with patients.
Among the ways AI is being used at AdventHealth is in the imaging department to detect early signs of potential strokes. The system has X-rays with AI that screen for osteoporosis. AI also monitors patients and sends alerts about signs of sepsis, the leading cause of hospital deaths in the U.S.
“A question we often get when talking about AI is: Will doctors and other health care workers be replaced by technology?” Dr. Herrera said. “The answer is no. These tools will not replace but augment the capabilities of the workforce and will help them be more effective and efficient doing their jobs, while improving their experience when taking care of patients.”
Another way AI can help in clinical settings is by streamlining basic tasks. For example, using ambient listening tools during physician/patient visits so the doctor can focus solely on talking to the patient, while the tool transcribes the relevant information for the patient’s record and documentation.
“Like any evolving technology, no one can predict how AI will benefit the health care industry in years to come,” Dr. Herrera said. “But we believe AI has the power to help our providers and patients in many ways when used responsibly, with more uses to come as the technology becomes more reliable and advanced.”
Recent News
St. Luke's Hospital in Columbus, North Carolina, had been planning to ink a management agreement with AdventHealth, one of the nation's largest health systems, for months. But just days before the...
AdventHealth President and CEO Terry Shaw has been named one of Modern Healthcare’s 100 Most Influential People in Healthcare for 2024, marking continued recognition of Shaw as a transformative leader...
AdventHealth has named Elise MacCarroll-Wright as president and CEO of UChicago Medicine AdventHealth Hinsdale in its Great Lakes Region, effective Jan. 6, 2025.
AdventHealth has named Dave Tkachuck president/CEO for UChicago Medicine AdventHealth La Grange, effective Jan. 6.
A UChicago Medicine AdventHealth neurologist addresses the growing gap between the number of men and women diagnosed with MS.
AdventHealth has named Ryan Quattlebaum president/CEO for AdventHealth Wesley Chapel, effective Dec. 29.
Health care and government leaders celebrate the much-anticipated expansion of AdventHealth University.
Wangsness has more than 30 years of experience in health care.
‘Imagine Wholeness’ features the Grammy-winning group Take 6 and the AdventHealth Orchestra.
Bejarano will assume leadership on Dec. 15, 2024.
The 25th anniversary of ‘To Err is Human’ provides an opportunity to reflect on key learnings that have shaped the hospital system’s culture of safety.
AdventHealth has achieved the top spot on the Gartner Healthcare Supply Chain Top 25 for 2024.