07-06-24 TPE Native Path PM

A Look at How AI is Infiltrating Healthcare, and Other News

Trusting AI Instead of a Doc?

At Mount Sinai Health System in New York City, AI technology has been employed to monitor patients in "step down" units, where patients are not critically ill enough for the ICU but still require close observation. The AI systems keep track of vital signs, heart rhythms, lab results, and nurse observations. Patients were categorized into two groups for a study: one monitored by AI and the other by traditional methods. When the AI detected a potential decline in a patient's health, it alerted the medical team to intervene promptly. The findings were significant: patients monitored by AI were 43% more likely to receive timely medication for heart and circulatory support, and they exhibited a lower 30-day mortality rate (7%) compared to those under traditional monitoring (9.3%).

Public trust in AI-driven healthcare is also on the rise. A survey revealed that 64% of participants would prefer an AI-generated diagnosis over one from a human doctor, a sentiment even stronger among Gen Z, with 80% favoring AI.

Did you eat this for breakfast this morning?

According to research, this breakfast food could be clogging your liver… 

It’s so bad it can stop your liver from processing and eliminating wastes…

If your “blocked” liver can’t do its job, it’ll get so backed up that the body becomes full of toxins.

Fact is...

The more you eat liver-clogging foods…

The more toxins you’ll have building up in your body.

Which can slow everything down… Leading to weight gain, tiredness, and even stomach pain.

Does any of this sound familiar to you?

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5 Crazy Facts:

  • Bobby McFerrin’s song “Don’t Worry Be Happy” is actually capable of making people feel happy.

  • Lisa Frank has a proprietary ink that makes the colors brighter.

  • Van Halen’s rider famously included a bowl of M&Ms with no brown ones. This was used to make sure that the venue was detail-oriented. If they saw brown M&Ms, they knew there were going to potentially be dangerous technical problems on stage.

  • The first popular phone greeting was “Ahoy!”

  • 100,000 payphones still exist in the US.