Oct 21, 2020

The artificial intelligence tool designed to diagnose dementia in minutes

According to the Japanese health ministry, as of 2012, around 4.62 million Japanese people were living with dementia. By 2025, that number is expected to rise to more than 7 million. But working out of Tokyo, data analysis company, Fronteo, is aiming to begin clinical trials of a new artificial intelligence program that could drastically cut down dementia diagnosis time. 

As soon as early next year, the diagnostic tool will be used to analyse five – ten minutes of conversation between a patient and their doctor. Once the conversations have been analysed, diagnosis should only take about one minute. 

The system, which takes the conversations between doctors and patients and transcribes them into text, uses the transcription to analyse the structure and word choice of the patient. The doctor then takes the AI analysis to help make their final diagnosis. So far, during basic testing, the system has accurately diagnosed dementia 85% of the time, which is a similar percentage achieved by medical specialists. 

Taking the system into clinical trials will further test the program’s accuracy as it is used in more real world diagnosis environments. As the objective diagnosis of dementia can be difficult, requiring a series of interviews and subjective judgement, Fronteo hopes this new AI system can help doctors make more efficient diagnosis, even if they are not specialists. 

So far, AI is only being used to analyse images in licensed medical equipment, such as endoscopes, making Fronteo the first company in Japan to conduct clinical trials of AI analysing conversation. They have said that they hope the program will help to alleviate stress on both doctors and patients, and make the process of early diagnosis of dementia must smoother. 

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

“In my five years of caring, I never slept one whole night” – study looks at how sleep deprivation impacts carers

Family caregivers, particularly those caring for people living with dementia, are suffering from sleep deprivation and a range of related health problems. New research from Edith Cowan University, published this month, has shed light on the extent of the problem, finding that 94% of participants in the study experienced sleep disturbances. Read More

“Dementia is the only illness I know where people are told to go home and prepare to die via aged care rather than fight for their lives.”

There are more than 50 million people living with dementia around the world – and approximately 1 new diagnosis every 3.2 seconds. In Australia alone, there one more than 413, 000 people diagnosed with dementia. One notable person, is Kate Swaffer, the CEO and co-founder of Dementia Alliance International. Kate spoke at ITAC 2017 about... Read More

Why access to real-time resident data is critical in aged care

Providing person-centred care is fundamental in aged care, and fast and reliable access to resident data is critical in the delivery of that care. But when Debbie Jolley stepped into the role of Quality and Care Manager for Queensland aged care provider Pyramid Residential in 2018, she inherited a paper-based records system - which wasn't providing the timely data that they needed. Read More
Advertisement