About a year ago, I dug into FDA’s newly-released list of its AI medical device approvals. In that post, I noted some surprising findings: AI approvals were (1) becoming more concentrated, with a small group of companies winning a large percentage of the approvals, and (2) most approvals were going to established medical device titans, like Siemens and GE, rather than to startups. Both findings showing that AI in medicine was providing sustaining innovation for established companies more than disrupting the established ecosystem. With this release, I wanted to see if my earlier findings still held, how fast innovation was accelerating, how quickly were more companies getting involved — and what other surprises lay within the data.
Read MoreLike many, I’ve been reading about, and trying out, the latest AI tool. ChatGPT, created by OpenAI, is the most advanced chatbot you’ve ever seen. In its back and forth conversational interface you can ask questions about just about anything and get pretty impressive answers. So I wondered what it could tell us about the future of healthcare.
Read MoreAssuming that doctors will always be at the center of healthcare is like imagining in 1982 that the US Postal Service will be in charge of email in 2022.
Read More99% of our health data is consumer based, not in any EHR, and that disproportion is getting more pronounced every year. What does this mean for health innovation?
Read MoreStanford’s 2020 Health Trends Report says physicians are expecting and preparing for innovation — but their own data shows the opposite.
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