A Blog by Jonathan Low

 

Oct 6, 2020

How Human Collaboration Helped An AI Tool To Fight Hospital Deaths Succeed

As with the introduction of new technology in most organizations, the AI would not have worked but for the human intervention and assistance in training, communicating with professionals working with it, addressing personnel concerns, fixing processes and monitoring progress. JL

Karen Hao reports in MIT Technology Review:

The tool has dramatically reduced sepsis-induced patient deaths and is now part of a federally registered clinical trial expected to share its results in 2021.Through careful testing, an AI model successfully augmented doctors’ ability to diagnose disease. But the other (story) is the amount of skilled labor the clinicians leading the project needed to perform in order to integrate the tool into their daily workflows. This included designing new communication protocols and creating new training materials but also navigating workplace politics and power dynamics.
In November of 2018, a new deep-learning tool went online in the emergency department of the Duke University Health System. Called Sepsis Watch, it was designed to help doctors spot early signs of one of the leading causes of hospital deaths globally.
Sepsis occurs when an infection triggers full-body inflammation and ultimately causes organs to shut down. It can be treated if diagnosed early enough, but that’s a notoriously hard task because its symptoms are easily mistaken for signs of something else.
Sepsis Watch promised to change that. The product of three and a half years of development (which included digitizing health records, analyzing 32 million data points, and designing a simple interface in the form of an iPad app), it scores patients on an hourly basis for their likelihood of developing the condition. It then flags those who are medium or high risk and those who already meet the criteria. Once a doctor confirms the diagnosis, the patients get immediate attention.
In the two years since the tool’s introduction, anecdotal evidence from Duke Health’s hospital managers and clinicians has suggested that Sepsis Watch really works. It has dramatically reduced sepsis-induced patient deaths and is now part of a federally registered clinical trial expected to share its results in 2021.

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