Executive Briefings | October 1, 2019
Augmented Intelligence In The Here & Now
Bring up the concept of artificial intelligence (AI)—sometimes referred to as augmented intelligence—in a room full of health and human service executives and the reactions are usually “interesting but nothing I need to think about now.”
But, that’s not the case. We’ve seen AI used for health care infrastructure and big data analytics for predictive modeling and the recognition of diagnostic errors, like those at Montefiore and Johns Hopkins. We’ve also seen the development of care coordination command centers that use AI to track consumer progression in hospitals while managing staff workload, like those developed . . .