Forbes January 27, 2024
Shashank Agarwal

As the global healthcare industry continues to crumble from staffing shortages, artificial intelligence is being touted as the saving grace for both public and private sectors. The technology, with its ability to learn and handle tasks like detecting tumors from scans, has to potential to save healthcare workers from being overexerted as well as give them time to focus on delivering the highest quality of care.

But, the thing with AI is, it needs data to work perfectly. If the models aren’t trained on complete, unbiased and high-quality data, the outputs will not be up to the mark. For most healthcare organizations looking to leverage AI in some capacity, this particular aspect has been incredibly draining. The sensitivity of patient...

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