Login / Register

Username:


Password: [Lost?]



New User? Click here for your FREE subscription



Nurses
Nurses Post a healthcare recruiting ad

Follow Us


NEWS-Line on Twitter NEWS-Line on Facebook NEWS-Line on Google+ NEWS-Line on LinkedIn NEWS-Line on Pinterest


Nursing Conferences &
Educational Opportunities




The Human Side of AI: Predicting Spine Surgery Outcomes | NEWS-Line for Nurses

The Human Side of AI: Predicting Spine Surgery Outcomes


Source:

Ever since Corey Walker, MD, became a spine surgeon, the traditional measure of success focused on how well a patient was able to walk, bend or move after spine surgery. Now, with the help of artificial intelligence, Walker is measuring success differently.

"The unique thing we’re doing with this project is really focusing in on the pain medication part of it, because opioid addiction continues to be a challenge, and we are looking for ways to improve pain management after surgery," Walker said.

Walker’s team, in collaboration with the Cedars-Sinai Department of Computational Biomedicine, is using artificial intelligence and machine learning to predict which patients are most likely to successfully manage their pain post-surgery, and which patients might need additional assistance.

"This project uses artificial intelligence algorithms to analyze millions of data points and predict which patients may need additional help with pain management after surgery," said Jason Moore, PhD, chair of the Department of Computational Biomedicine and acting professor of Medicine.

The algorithm makes a prediction based on a subset of the data, then tests its own predictions against new subsets, and continually improves and updates the methodology as it learns more. While clinical trials usually test one or two variables at a time, algorithms like these crunch thousands of variables at a time.

"The more data you feed it, the better," Walker said. "We look at everything from a patient’s blood pressure to their age, to what types of medications they were taking before surgery and how long they’ve been on those medications."

But what happens when the algorithm does identify a patient as likely to struggle with weaning from pain medications?

"It becomes an ethical question," Walker said, "I definitely do not think the answer is that they go without the surgery or treatment, but rather that we engage the pain management team and other specialists early on in the process."

Walker said previous studies have suggested that certain techniques, like weaning a patient off pain medication before surgery or changing the pain medication before surgery, can have an impact on the patient’s need for pain medications after surgery.

But Moore said it’s not enough to teach physicians to utilize artificial intelligence. Artificial intelligence has a lot to learn, as well.

"We need to teach AI to understand the value of humans," he said.

Moore said that human involvement with artificial intelligence begins with the types of questions physicians and investigators are asking.

"Formulating questions is still a uniquely human activity, which relies on a depth, breadth and synthesis of knowledge of different kinds," Moore said. "It also relies on creative thought and imagination, and asking the right questions is key."

Read more on the Cedars-Sinai Blog: Artificial Intelligence at Cedars-Sinai

URL : https://www.cedars-sinai.org/newsroom/the-human-side-of-ai-predicting-spine-surgery-outcomes/

Source: Cedars-Sinai

Image: Getty via Cedars-Sinai






Share This!


Nursing Jobs




Director, Healthcare Supports, Clinical - Full Time 40 hrs - Salary $95,000

The ARC of Union County
Springfield, New Jersey

Assistant Nurse Manager,

Health Center Inc
New York, New York

Registered Clinical Nurse (RN)

The Arc of Union County
Springfield, New Jersey

Nurse - LPN or RN - $1500.00 sign-on Bonus

BARC Developmental Services
Quakertown area, Pennsylvania

Nurse Manager & Nurse Supervisors

Four Winds Hospital
Northern Westchester County, New York

Director of Nursing - Full-time 9 AM to 5 PM - $90,000.00 per year

The ARC of Union County
Springfield, New Jersey

More Jobs
(Dismiss) Thank you for visiting NEWS-Line! Please sign up, login, or follow us on your favorite social networks
to receive custom tailored eNews, job listings, and educational opportunities for your specific profession.