Healthcare · Topic
Ai Diagnostics
7 articles from Healthcare practitioners
Digital healthcare's four pillars: how hardware, software, platforms, and enablers are reshaping medicine
From AI-powered diagnostics to electroceuticals, digital health's four core sectors are drawing global investment and reshaping care delivery.
Healthcare’s 2026 Reality: Growing Workforce Gaps, Tiered Access, and the Rise of AI Support
Healthcare systems are entering 2026 under mounting pressure. A growing, aging population and rising disease burden are colliding with persistent workforce shortages—highlighted by projections that new cancer diagnoses in the U.S. will surpass two million this year alone. The stakes are no longer theoretical: delays in care, limited specialist access, and widening disparities are…
Patient Care and Orthopedic Innovation in the Age of AI: Why Human Skill Still Outweighs Robotics
The rise of artificial intelligence in medicine is reshaping how orthopedic surgeons diagnose, plan, and deliver care. From robotics in the operating room to AI-driven diagnostics and bone segmentation tools, orthopedic innovation is advancing rapidly. Yet, adoption in everyday surgical practice has been more measured. For example, in 2022, robot-assisted technology accounted for…
Private Equity and Venture Capital Are Transforming Healthcare – But at What Cost?
Billions in healthcare investments fuel innovation while raising concerns about whether profit motives align with patient care
AI-Powered Remote Cardiac Monitoring Improves Care Access, Disease Detection, and Diagnostic Accuracy
Advanced monitoring systems are detecting heart conditions earlier while reducing errors and expanding care reach for underserved populations
Neural Codes: AI Innovates Chronic Pain Management
Advanced AI systems are reshaping how clinicians diagnose and treat persistent pain conditions
The Benefits of WBCT 3D Imaging Technologies with Dr. Francois Lintz: Part 2 of 2
Three-dimensional imaging reveals complex hindfoot alignment patterns that traditional X-rays simply cannot capture