Worcester Business Journal

April 17, 2023

Issue link: https://nebusinessmedia.uberflip.com/i/1497035

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 14 of 23

wbjournal.com | April 17, 2023 | Worcester Business Journal 15 May 4, 2023 7:30am - 4:00pm DCU Center THE LARGEST WOMEN'S LEADERSHIP CONFERENCE IN CENTRAL MASS KEYNOTE SPEAKER CARLA HARRIS Presenting Sponsors: KEYNOTE SPEAKER MINDA HARTS Keynote Sponsors: Two National Keynote Speakers | Eight Workshops | Forty Exhibitors | Seven Hundred Women | Continental breakfast and Plated Lunch | Networking Reception and More! GET YOUR TICKETS TODAY! 695 Main Street, Holden MA 01520 Phone: (508) 829-5566 holdenhearingaid.com/audiologist HAVE YOU EVER HAD A HEARING EVALUATION? Matthew Moreno, Au.D. Doctor of Audiology • Hearing Aids • Batteries & Accessories • Assisted Listening Devises • Amplified Phones • Hearing Evaluations • Wax Removal • Hearing Protection • Musician's Ear Plugs • Swim Plugs Many hearing issues go undetected and that can lead to hearing loss, tinnitus and balance disorders. We offer comprehensive hearing care services including complete hearing evaluations, hearing loss rehabilitation, education and counseling. H E A LT H C A R E F O C U S applicable to other demographic groups. "ere's no denying that it's a heavily biased dataset towards a particular type of person. And it might not perform as accurately or maintain these really nice performance parameters when we put it out into practice," Marya said. Getting the best results While there is cause for a measured in- troduction of the new machine-learning technology into the practice of medicine, increased access to soware physicians can use in tandem with their expertise may increase access to needed health care in less serviced areas, said Dr. Ber- nardo Bizzo, senior director of the Data Science Office at Mass General Brigham in Boston. Bizzo's team works on soware as a medical device, he said. With success, they have developed technology to detect early acute infarcts in some instances that neuroradiologists did not. In his esti- mation, a wave of new, similarly capable soware is here. "We are at an inflection point with this [AI] technology. e expectation is that there will be a lot more AI products made available at a much faster pace," he said. Marya said he may appear too nervous in his full adoption of the technology, but he just wants to work out the issues. "I love the research we're doing; and I'm really passionate about it, and I trust it; but I think we need to be measured with how we approach this," he said. "It's really important to do this right." Rundensteiner said, based on how the public responds to AI overall, patients will continue to want the human element in the forefront, even if the technology is delivering more definitive answers. "Most [patients] would probably still say that they want that human touch right now. But I believe it's just a matter of time until we might want that convenience, and the human is maybe just a face because even that human that they're talking to has computers behind them," she said. Patients and their families are oen less skeptical than expected, said Marya. When it comes to life-threatening illnesses, patients and their families are open to most technologies with minimal hesitation. "If there was a better way, a more accurate way to get a diagnosis sooner, they're all for it," he said. "A lot of people, for good and bad, I think they just want the most accurate diagnosis done as soon as possible. And however that's done, I think people just want the best results." W

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of Worcester Business Journal - April 17, 2023