News, Trends, and Insights for IT & Managed Services Providers
News, Trends, and Insights for IT & Managed Services Providers

96

Revolutionizing Medicine with AI: A Digital Health Deep Dive

Delve into the future of healthcare through AI advancements.<!–

View this email in your browser

 

The weekly newsletter of the Business of Tech, giving you new insights into the world of IT service delivery. 

Looking for stories from the podcast stories?  Check out the pod itself on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or daily in your inbox.   Stories are available to everyone for five days,and Patreon supporters forever.

Was this forwarded to you?  Join the list!

 

 
 

 

 

 

Real World AI Use Cases: Digital Healthcare

 

 
 

 

 

 

No matter how many theoretical or high-level discussions we have about AI implementation, nothing beats the illustrative power of use cases. They’re great for getting ideas about what’s possible with your own customer work, and it never hurts to check in on the latest trends in a particular space. 
 
So, when I had the opportunity to talk to software development and data analytics expert RJ Kedziora, I wanted to pick his brain about AI’s impact on digital healthcare. He’s the founder of Estenda Solutions, a custom software data analytics turned AI company that helps other entities create and bring products to market.
 
Curious about what AI is bringing to the digital healthcare table? Here’s what Kedziora shared on his bonus episode of The Business of Tech.
 
Estenda’s expertise
 
Digital health is now a booming industry, but Kedziora worked in it long before it was even called digital health. He co-founded Estenda Solutions about 20 years ago to help everyone from Fortune 50s to large medical device manufacturers to startups develop the solutions and products they’re taking to market. The team’s focus has always been improving health and wellness through innovation and data analytics, which now includes AI. 
 
For example, Kedziora has been involved with the Indian Health Services department for decades through a partnership with the Joslin Diabetes Center’s diabetic retinopathy surveillance program. Estenda’s work involves over 100 cameras deployed throughout the country that take images of the backs of people’s eyes for the detection of diabetic retinopathy. In the startup realm, he’s helped companies fuse data with wearable information to create digital weight loss solutions. 
 
And, as many experts who stop by the show can attest, AI has been around for quite a while now:
 
“It’s not something that just jumped on the scene. We’ve been involved in various AI systems over the years, developing medication recommendation systems that were expert system-based back in the early 2000s, and now today, implementing Gen AI types of solutions to address the challenges in healthcare,” he said.
 
Kedziora’s take on the evolution of AI
 
Still, there’s something about this moment in time that makes AI feel more cutting-edge than ever. What does Kedziora think is different about AI now versus AI-related work from 20 years ago?
 
For one, he believes that the average non-technical person now being able to take advantage of AI – and even drive impact with it – is a major difference. Take the medication recommendation system he mentioned; it required a large amount of data, had an extensive expert-level system behind the scenes, and had a Y2K-style interface. Today, to create that system, APIs and generative AI could craft the same rules and present it in a far more user-friendly fashion.
 
Along those lines, the shift away from having to learn SQL is another major difference he’s observed:
 
“It’s relatively easy to learn in the grand scheme of things, but it’s something you have to learn and understand and how to use it effectively. Where now, we’re developing systems that put the gen AI on top of that data. So the average person doesn’t have to learn or understand tools and technology and can start querying and looking at that data,” he said.
 
This development has changed the game so much that now, according to Kedziora, people might not even have to learn Excel to query patient population data, for example.
 
That reminded me of my personal experience dealing with the woes of report building. I asked Kedziora if AI-powered solutions could replace that type of work, and he agreed: natural language prompts could absolutely replace current report space norms. Imagine typing prompts like ‘find me all the patients that have diabetes or find all the patients that have congestive heart disease’ — that’s where he believes AI could continue making waves in digital health.
 
 
Prerequisites for taking advantage of AI
 
But how can we lead clients to that point? I asked Kedziora for his take on what’s necessary to help customers prepare their data for AI solutions. 
 
If you’ve tracked what previous AI experts had to say on this front, you already know his answer: start with the data strategy.
 
“You can’t just have a mass of information that is then understood by an AI. You need to provide that structure or methodology to be able to put that data in a format that is usable by the AI. Whether it is unstructured data out of a PDF document or your electronic medical record system, it has to have an understanding of what that information is and what is available,” he said.
 
Of course, safety also warrants heavy consideration. He believes that all of the cybersecurity privacy guidelines you already use very much apply to AI-related data. For health tech folks, that includes regulations like HIPAA.
 
Later, when I asked Kedziora what AI customers ask about the most, he brought us back to this prerequisite stage. Understanding data is the #1 thing people need to get started with AI-powered solutions, so there’s certainly an opportunity here.
 
Frameworks for accelerating AI adoption
 
Next comes implementation. How does Kedziora recommend safely accelerating this process for customers?
 
His answer is simple: checklists. More specifically, checklists inspired by standards like ISO, OWASP, and NIST.
 
He suggests thinking of this process as you would a zero-trust architecture – as you get logged into the system, you have zero access to anything until you slowly apply each principle to it. So, think of these projects as needing ground-up development, and if you can check one box today, remember to apply it at a later stage. 
 
As you go, don’t forget about the human training component.
 
“Technology is important, but it’s very much about people and processes as well. When you are implementing a cybersecurity system or protecting your data, looking at privacy, you can’t forget the people and the processes in place to control that data,” he said.
 
AI’s role in Estenda’s development process
 
I was also curious how Kedziora uses AI in his own development process, outside of hands-on customer work. What practical applications is he finding the most useful?
 
Big picture, he believes AI will soon be unavoidable as a developer. Day to day, he loves using natural language prompts to speed up his usual work. For example, instead of hand-crafting a demo solution, he used ChatGPT to get Python up and running on his system and asked it to help figure out a new API he found. 
 
“It’s not going to get it right all of the time. But it’s going to give you that jumpstart to understanding it. And then, you have to understand the framework. What else is going on within your production application to make sure it makes sense?” he said.
 
From an operational and higher level product perspective, he also uses natural language prompts to ask questions like, what have I forgotten (from his aforementioned checklist)? What else do I need to consider to be able to help jumpstart those thought processes? When he conducts user interviews, he might also ask ChatGPT for help coming up with questions. 
 
While he could easily do all these tasks himself, to Kedziora, it’s simply about efficiency. 
 
 

 
What use cases related to AI implementation do you hope to hear next? As always, my inbox is open for questions, stories, insights, or whatever else is on your mind.

More from MSP Radio

 

Missed Things? 

How about our latest videos to catch you up? 

The Daily Podcast available as videos

Cybersecurity Evolution: From Espionage to AI Threats & the Business of Protection with Eric ONeill

CMMC, HIPAA, Insurance, and the Future of Security Standards with Craig Petronella

Exploring Data Governance, AI Integration, & Self-Service Analytics with Collin Graves of North Labs

Exploring AI in Business Intelligence: Vectorization, LLMs, and Service Providers with Avi Perez

Exploring Shoppable Videos: B2B Sales and E-Commerce for Managed Services Providers with Eitan Koter

Exploring Neuro-AI: Merging Neuroscience w/ Generative AI for Innovation & Patents w/ A. K. Pradeep

Want the Daily News?   

All the stories from the daily Business of Tech Podcast are available in the daily digest, and stories are available to everyone for the first five days, and Patreon supporters forever.  Catch the audio of the show anytime on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, or wherever you find podcasts.  Links at businessof.tech

 

Copyright © 2024 MSP Radio, All rights reserved.

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list.

Choose your upgrade:

Get the full benefits of Business of Tech Plus

Insider Access

$12/month

Perfect for MSPs and ITSPs that want full interviews, early access, and ad-free listening

  • Programmatic Ad-free private podcast feedSame show, little interruptions
  • Channel Chatter previews1–2 topics with light insights
  • Early access to interview episodesHear it days before public release
  • Monthly Insider BriefTighter analysis you can share internally
  • Extra audio segmentsCut interviews, behind-the-scenes commentary, quick competitive notes
  • Become an Insider for $12/month

    Leadership Access

    $149/month

    Perfect for MSPs and Vendors that run a team and need the extended tactics, executive summaries, and weekly alignment brief

  • All Insider Access benefits plus . . .
  • Invite your teamIncludes access for 5 team members with option to add more
  • Vendor Strategy BriefsThe entire library, plus new analysis every month
  • Channel ChatterAll topics, full insights, complete vendor discussion + sentiment list
  • Quarterly State of the Channel Briefing
  • Monthly AMA submission priorityAsk Dave direct questions, and skip the line
  • Get the Leadership Edge for $149/month

    Vendor Partner

    $500/month

    Perfect for channel companies or vendors looking to deepen their engagement with the show.

  • All Leadership Access benefits plus . . .
  • Get highlighted as a show sponsor You'll get placement in the show notes, throughout the website, and on our dedicated sponsors page.
  • Enjoy regular shout outs You'll be featured in a rotating format during the show
  • Become a show sponsor for $500/month

    Search all stories