GE HealthCare on Monday announced a new artificial intelligence application it said will save time for doctors who diagnose and treat cancer.
CareIntellect for Oncology, as the tool is called, will help oncologists get up to speed on a patient’s history and disease progression by quickly showing them the data they need, the company said. GE said it wants to spare oncologists the headache of digging through records so they can focus on caring for their patients.
Health-care data is notoriously difficult to analyze, and as much as 97% of the data produced by hospitals goes unused, according to a Deloitte report. That information is stored across numerous vendors and file formats such as images, lab test results, clinical notes and device readings, which can be extremely taxing for doctors to sort through.
“It’s very time-consuming, very frustrating for these clinicians,” Dr. Taha Kass-Hout, GE HealthCare’s global chief science and technology officer, told CNBC in an interview.
CareIntellect …