“The job is going to change from reactively treating everything to proactive health,”
Yarid said. “We are going to be the gatekeepers of amplifying health and improving
the quality of life in our population as opposed to mitigating the reduction in quality
of life as we age and in reacting to disease states with medications in treating symptoms.”
9 Ways AI Can Improve Health Care
Key Points
Generative AI holds immense potential to revolutionize healthcare.
Yarid envisions a shift from reactive treatment to proactive health, where healthcare
providers become gatekeepers focused on amplifying health and improving the quality
of life rather than solely treating symptoms.
AI's ability to analyze large amounts of patient data is expected to help identify
anomalies and potential health issues at earlier stages, allowing for interventions
before conditions become significant problems.
1. Aiding in Patient Examination
One aspect of being a good healthcare provider is the ability to pick up on things
the patient does not say, or is unable to tell you. Yarid envisions a future in which
patient encounters are monitored by AI systems that will assist physicians in detecting
meaningful nuances.
A patient, for instance, might have an inflection or shift in tone of voice when answering
a question. The AI system can detect that subtle change and give the physician a virtual
“nudge,” Yarid explained.
“It will give you an opportunity to start to go down pathways that you weren't aware
of,” he said.
It will also serve as a learning tool, Yarid added.
“You reflect upon that and say, ‘I did hear that. I didn't realize it was important.’
And then the next time you hear it, you don't need the tool to tell you,” he said.
“It brings an awareness to yourself that you can grow from.”
2. Identifying Problems Earlier
Another potential use of AI is looking at large amounts of patient data and identifying
anomalies.
While a patient may have a lab result within a normal range, that result could still
be abnormal for that patient. Yarid predicts AI will be used to assist providers in
identifying health issues at earlier stages.
“You can get ahead of a potential disease process rather than reacting to it when
it's already become a significant issue in their lives,” he said.
An example of this would be a patient whose blood pressure has typically measured
around 105/68—a normal reading. Over time, the readings creep upward.
“They're measuring at 125/84 and when you just look at it, you think that's normal
but if you look at the trend you know something's happening,” Yarid explained. “We're
gonna intervene at a much earlier place and we're going to start discovering that
we can prevent most of our suffering in these illnesses through this intense awareness.”
3. Reducing Healthcare Shortages
“If I had AI assistance, I could probably see twice as many patients,” Yarid said.
Currently, the system is structured in a way that someone with a chronic condition
has to come in several times a year. In a world where AI is helping monitor the patient,
the number of visits could be reduced, freeing up patient slots for others.
In the case of someone with diabetes, for example, AI would assist the physician in
assessing how well the condition was being controlled.
“We're following your blood sugar—making sure it's all good. I need to see you once
a year again. And now I have three more appointments,” he said.
If something changes with the patient’s condition, the physician is notified immediately
and can schedule an appointment to see the patient.
4. Making Health Care More Affordable
With AI systems ultimately reducing the need for some positions and increasing efficiency
in healthcare delivery, costs for providing health care should go down.
Yarid estimates these AI-facilitated cost reductions could occur within a relatively
short period of time.
“You're talking about huge reductions in the cost of health care, over 50%” he said.
“It is possible within 10 years.”
5. Improving Diagnostics
In the near future, according to Yarid, tests such as EKGs will no longer resemble
their current form.
“You're going to walk in and someone is either going to throw something around your
chest or you’ll put this vest on and it's going to measure your heart from 360 degrees
and give you a three-dimensional view of your heart and all the electrical activity
as opposed to interpreting these lines on paper,” he predicted. “It's gonna give you
an overwhelmingly accurate view of the heart compared to what we currently have.”
6. Monitoring Health
Instead of an Apple Watch or Fitbit or other wearable device, Yarid believes the health
technology of the future will be more integrated.
“It'll probably be embedded,” he said. “It probably won't be wearable. Honestly, chances
are soon enough, it'll be like a tattoo.”
The device, he expects, will monitor your blood sugar, pulse and other vital signs.
“It'll be constantly monitored whether it's on you or just under your skin,” he said.
Not only will physicians have access to the collected data, but the patients will
be able to view the information as well.
“It'll be glasses for a minute, but then it'll go straight to something even more
profound,” he said. His best guess as to what shape that might take—lens replacement.
“Our lens replacement is going to have a built-in interface that we're gonna be able
to look at the world and it's going to tell us all kinds of things about ourselves
and what we need,” he projects.
7. Making Data Accessible
According to Yarid, electronic medical record (EMR) systems have failed miserably
in living up to their promise of making entries from disparate systems easily accessible
to patients and providers.
Instead, he said, you have resources allocated to glorified data entry and patients
end up with hundreds of pages of essentially useless information.
With AI, years of physician notes and laboratory results could be summarized and provide
physicians with key information in one place and allow them to interact with that
data.
This could help improve patient safety and outcomes by ensuring important information
is not overlooked.
“It's a safety net and enhances our ability to be efficient, effective with our time—and
deal with the onslaught of information we have to address every day with expected
perfection,” Yarid said.
8. Enhancing Surgeries
What if AI could be used to direct robotic surgery? This is another potential use
Yarid sees for generative AI.
“There will still be surgeries, but it'll be very different,” he said. “I can see
having a master surgeon in a room. Anywhere in the world with a whole bunch of screens
up.”
If the AI surgeon detects an issue, then an alert can be triggered notifying the master
surgeon to intervene.
“You need some human input, and it'll learn from that and then at some point you won't
even need that,” Yarid anticipates.
9. Personalizing Medications
Today’s medications come in a set range of dosages. Patients are prescribed a dosage
that best matches their needs within the limitations of the available dosage amounts.
Yarid foresees a future in which medications become person-specific.
“Theoretically, AI applications can be utilized across fields. You'll basically have
medications printed for you,” he said. “So you'll have a medication of 37.2 milligrams
and that's your specific medication dosage tailored to you and that's what you are
going to get from the pharmacy.”
Yarid also expects AI to make medication management easier.
“Say you take eight medications—AI will actually turn it into just one pill a day,”
he said.
Breakthroughs such as this will come from AI’s ability to process large numbers of
variables allowing highly customized treatments.
AI in Medicine
The ability to relate variables to each other is something humans can do on a limited
basis. For AI, the capacity is essentially unlimited.
“We're going to discover associations we never dreamed of, never thought of, and it's
going to happen really fast,” Yarid said. “It's already happening.”
As for how long it might take before we see these types of changes in clinical practice,
Yarid admits it is hard to predict.
“There are so many wild cards that if any one of them shifts in a direction, that
changes the entire course,” he said.
Yarid believes having the ability to process and analyze such large amounts of data
will open the floodgates.
“I do know that within a decade society—and our living—will be radically different
than anything we're looking at today,” he said.