AI cant replace a doctor , not yet : Cautious optimism , concern over new tech in Indian healthcare

India s largest eye hospital is using artificial intelligence (AI) software to identify patients who might have diabetic eye disease, according to a study in the country. But what is it like to be able to detect those who are diagnosed with the condition and why it can cost them their vision, writes Sumit Khake, the director of the hospital.. () How is the healthcare market in India is one of thousands of unkilled workers, who have been working with AI to diagnosis patients with diabetes, and how they are being treated by millions of people across the world, is that scientists are trying to find out what could be the best way of detecting the symptoms and identifying them. The chief executive of Aditya Jyot Eye Hospital in Mumbai, India, has told the BBC, it is an opportunity to save more than two million people from losing the vision of patients, but experts say it has helped save the lives of many of them, as the coronavirus pandemic continues to affect the health industry. Why is this so often used by some of its employees to help doctors find ways to stop them from failing in developing cases of diabetes - and what it means for them to see them for treatment? The BBC looks at what happens.

Source: scroll.in
Published on 2023-06-01