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Results for "Electronic Health Records"

MedPromptX: Grounded Multimodal Prompting for Chest X-ray Diagnosis

arXiv ·

The paper introduces MedPromptX, a clinical decision support system using multimodal large language models (MLLMs), few-shot prompting (FP), and visual grounding (VG) for chest X-ray diagnosis, integrating imagery with EHR data. MedPromptX refines few-shot data dynamically for real-time adjustment to new patient scenarios and narrows the search area in X-ray images. The study introduces MedPromptX-VQA, a new visual question answering dataset, and demonstrates state-of-the-art performance with an 11% improvement in F1-score compared to baselines.

The Human Phenotype Project

MBZUAI ·

Professor Eran Segal presented The Human Phenotype Project, a longitudinal cohort study with over 10,000 participants. The project aims to identify molecular markers and develop prediction models for disease using deep profiling techniques including medical history, lifestyle, blood tests, and microbiome analysis. The study provides insights into drivers of obesity, diabetes, and heart disease, identifying novel markers at the microbiome, metabolite, and immune system level. Why it matters: Such large-scale phenotyping initiatives could inform personalized medicine approaches relevant to the Middle East's specific health challenges.

Transforming Saudi Arabia’s healthcare system

KAUST ·

KAUST is supporting Saudi Arabia's healthcare modernization by translating laboratory research into smart, digital, and precise solutions. One example is the Social and Personal Adaptive Response Kit (SPARK), an AI-driven technology integrating behavioral analysis, wearable multi-sensor systems, and human body communication to support children with autism. KAUST researchers have also developed a fully printed wireless electrocardiogram system and a smart bandage for various applications. Why it matters: These innovations align with Saudi Vision 2030 and have the potential to improve healthcare outcomes in Saudi Arabia and globally through personalized, remote care.

The AI will see you now

MBZUAI ·

MBZUAI is developing AI algorithms to intelligently process data from wearables and home sensors for remote patient monitoring. The algorithms aim to analyze multiple strands of health data to provide a more comprehensive view of a patient's health, distinguishing between genuine emergencies and benign situations. MBZUAI's provost, Professor Fakhri Karray, believes this approach could handle 20-25% of diagnoses virtually, reducing the burden on healthcare systems. Why it matters: This research could significantly improve healthcare efficiency and accessibility in the UAE and beyond by enabling more effective remote patient monitoring and reducing unnecessary hospital visits.

Virtual launch of Smart-Health Initiative

KAUST ·

KAUST has launched the Smart-Health Initiative (SHI) to integrate smart technology into the Saudi healthcare system. The SHI aims to collaborate with hospitals and academic institutions to implement smart-health tools for disease prevention, diagnosis, and treatment. It focuses on precision medicine approaches for widespread diseases like metabolic syndrome disorders, genetic and infectious diseases. Why it matters: This initiative could modernize the Kingdom's healthcare system and promote personalized medicine by developing translational research programs and training clinicians in precision medicine.

Enabling Practical and Rich User Digitization

MBZUAI ·

A computer science vision involves computing devices becoming proactive assistants, enhancing various aspects of life through user digitization. Current devices provide coarse digital representations of users, but there's significant potential for improvement. Karan, a Ph.D. candidate at CMU, develops technologies for consumer devices to capture richer user representations without sacrificing practicality. Why it matters: Advancements in user digitization can lead to improved extended reality experiences, health tracking, and more productive work environments, enhancing the utility of consumer devices.

Personalized medicine based on deep human phenotyping

MBZUAI ·

Eran Segal from Weizmann Institute of Science presented The Human Phenotype Project, a large-scale prospective cohort with over 10,000 participants. The project aims to identify novel molecular markers and develop prediction models for disease onset using deep profiling. The profiling includes medical history, lifestyle, blood tests, and molecular profiling of the transcriptome, genetics, microbiome, metabolome and immune system. Why it matters: Such projects demonstrate the growing focus on personalized medicine in the region, utilizing advanced AI and machine learning techniques for disease prevention and treatment.