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FDA’s Support of AI in Telemedicine

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April 28, 2020

Epstein Becker & Green’s Bradley Merrill Thompson describes the agency’s current trajectory for regulation of patient-facing and provider-facing telehealth products that incorporate AI.

Many appreciate that telemedicine is more than just using Skype so that a doctor can look a patient in the eyes. For telemedicine to be truly useful, the patient must be able to collect and transmit a variety of data the healthcare professional needs in order to assess the patient’s health. Indeed, state regulators have historically been skeptical of telemedicine precisely because they fear that the doctor-patient relationship in that context is too thin, with doctors being forced to make judgments based on too little available information.

Artificial intelligence can help. It can help with data collection by instructing patients how to use medical technology that collects data. It can help physicians sort through and analyze the data they do receive. It can even help deliver therapy.

In the face of COVID-19 with its attendant greater need for medical services while achieving social distancing, is FDA now ready to support the use of AI in telemedicine? I think they are.

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Technology Trends in Collecting Telemedicine Data
Current telemedicine is already able to collect data in many ways, including the use of weight scales, blood pressure cuffs, heart monitors, blood glucose meters, pulse oximeters and peek flow meters and thermometers, among many others. While quite useful, all those are fairly basic. The devices have existed for years, and the innovation over the last several years primarily was simply adding connectivity and data management.

But technology is moving well beyond those vital sign monitors. For example, it’s been amply reported that ultrasound can now be done with a probe attached to a smart phone. ECG machines and other technologies also are likewise achieving small scales that allow for mobility.

Presently, in many cases like ultrasound, these new technologies are still limited to administration by licensed healthcare professionals because of their complexity, the risk associated with improper use and the difficulty in obtaining a high-quality image. But the next wave of innovation after creating cheaper and more mobile hardware will be using AI to help guide untrained users in how to administer these tests.

Read more here

Source: Mobihealth News

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