Sometimes you can almost get tired of listening to the use of him in health care, but then there are these clarified explanations of the advances that are, honestly, an amazing kind.

Many relate to predictive analytics and use of data to promote previous interventions. Most of us have an intuitive sense that achieving early medical problems will have a positive effect. But when you look at more detailed research and studies, those realities become much clearer.

Talking about health care

In a recent panel in IIA during Davos in January, Sandy Pentland interviewed a panel of people working in Vanguard of Health Systems. This includes Jared Josledyn to Rune Labs (and earlier of Sanafi), Edward Jung, a collaborator of Microsoft Research, and renowned cardiologist Ami Bhatt, as well as the Anurang of Stanford Healthcare and Siva Ganesan of the Tata Consultancy Services.

Among the panelists there has been a consensus that good healthcare technologies should be globally applicable, and that they should focus on moving from tertiary care to preventive medicine.

Our behavior and our health

Here is a great mirror I had not thought of, really, in this way before. We have dressed dresses to follow everything we do all day. What if you can know what behaviors will be the most threatening to your health in the coming years? Do you go up and down the stairs? Has your heartbeat accelerated from your cup of coffee?

This is just the beginning.

“We have data that can allow us to use predictive analytics,” Bhatt said, describing how this can work. “(We will be able) in fact) to tell you, which of those risk factors is most likely to affect your mortality, which is most likely to affect your quality of life. And then you can think about what this means to you.”

Being in the highest Tercil (one -third for the secular person) of cardio health, Bhatt said, will add about a decade in your life.

We can see what kind of risk factors, and which specific risk factor, will be more dangerous for any person.

This is a powerful proposal to think – that you can essentially undermine your personal information to understand what can cause problems for you on the road – whether this diet, daily routine or anything else.

Changing the world

Calling current models of unstable health care, Jung spoke to promoting healthy longevity and sustainable ways, and how ideally, health care must create economic productivity by interfering, and giving people more productive years of their lives. He mentioned a list of three technologies that may be useful for this purpose – the first is the one where large data can be analyzed in ways that support health. Next is Blockchain, where personal data can live in one place, and data ownership problems can be resolved. Third is cryptography, which can solve the problem of intimacy.

The Revri discussed the “rich environment” that we need to study and promote a mix of health care with computers science and ethics to create what he called a “responsible cycle of his life”.

Three principles, he said, are important: to use technology well, focus on prevention and self -service, and invent things to share with the world.

Moving data to effective places

In the second half of the discussion on the panel, the participants talked about getting all this data where they should be.

Evocation of a “ring view” of modern systems, Ganesan mentioned value chains and access to data sources that are structured, to go beyond sequential calculation with new methods that will help detect preventive solutions.

The challenges and points of pain

Bhatt and others thought some of our current limitations: an eventual deficit of 11 million doctors, and spending up to $ 11 trillion a year for incorrect results.

Also, the American average sees his or her doctor 16 minutes a year – that’s not much.

But the panelists suggested, if you can combine health and non-health data effectively, which can make each of those 16 minutes more effective.

Jung mentioned three parts for the solution: government policy groups, the ability to work with care institutions and health value models in the era of supercomputers.

And Bhatt discussed it 16 essential minutes and how to use it well.

It is a “moral injury,” she claimed to the clinics, who often can’t do what they have to do during that short time.

What do you do with the data?

Doctors need to know things, she said, like: does insurance cover a procedure and can a patient travel to a structure that offers a treatment?

“It’s not just market data,” she said. “It’S’S’S DATA FOR LIFE.”

Bhatt painted a picture of how you can get that life data as a doctor and enter a super prepared consultation.

Contemplating tomorrow’s health care

If you are like me, you are starting to see the big photo join when it comes to structured health care data. The idea is that we can learn more about people outside the doctor’s office and start working on possible problems long before they appear in treatment needs.

We are going through a new era, and this is quite true in the world of health care. Let’s keep a look at how things are formed as we move forward.

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