Indian Medical Imaging AI Company Qure.AI has developed a new AI-driven co-pilot for optimizing agents in the institutions for primary primary care.
This tool for community health workers is called AIRA and is powered by large language models that are trained on data from the health systems in countries with low and middle income. It helps users by automating the collection of patient data, including symptoms and history, collecting insights at population level, as well as supporting clinical protocol therapy compliance and offering decision support.
Why it matters
Primary health systems in developing countries are overloaded with a high patient volume and demand for care, while lacking or not have sufficient resources.
“There are 17 million to be prevented deaths in low and middle income countries and an estimated deficit of 11 million health workers by 2030. At the same time, more than 40% of the time of the community health workers are spent on manual data collection, and yet countries have no data on population level to make a statement in a statement.
Aira is the attempt by Qure.Ai to take on these challenges, which makes it possible to make the time of caregivers clear by manually collecting patient data and making better compliance with health protocols.
“Aira In the hands of every health caregiver will free their time for more interactions between patients through automated data collection and better clinical protocol,” said founder and CEO Prashant Warier.
The larger trend
The launch of AIRA follows that of the Qureos, which offers a single environment for exploring, testing and deploying several AI applications from different suppliers worldwide. The AI ​​Sandbox operating system is introduced in March, is offered to health systems in low and middle income countries to speed up their AI acceptance in health care.
The Indian startup of $ 250 million has been involved in various screening programs for the health of the population (in particular for tuberculosis, stroke and lung cancer, for which it has developed solutions) in developing countries with great health care and pharmaceutical companies, including Johnson & Johnson, Medtronic, and Astrazeneca.
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