Home Communication News Back New search Date Min Max Aeronautics Automotive Corporate Cybersecurity Defense and Security Financial Healthcare Industry Intelligent Transportation Systems Digital Public Services Services Space Healthcare Healthcare at the Artificial Intelligence Summit 2022 13/05/2022 Print Share The transformative impact of AI on the economy, society, and the healthcare industry, within a framework of respect for people’s rights. At the 5th Artificial Intelligence Summit 2022 organized by AMETIC, its president, Pedro Mier, highlighted the maturity that artificial intelligence has reached in Spain in the last five years, considering it one of the country’s key resources for boosting industry, the economy, and sustainability. In the healthcare industry, AI-linked technology is of particular relevance in two aspects of healthcare management. According to Inmaculada Pérez, Digital Health Manager at GMV’s Secure e-Solutions, this is because it helps to improve the speed and efficiency of diagnoses and allows for personalized treatments and continuous patient monitoring. As a result, it ensures better resource allocation and therefore improves the healthcare system’s sustainability. In addition, AI helps to accelerate research projects in a number of health fields, especially those engaged in developing new medicinal products. With regard to the development of AI solutions in healthcare, in Pérez’s opinion, the main obstacles to be overcome stem from access to data, fundamentally in terms of data security, interoperability, and privacy. The solution to these problems lies in establishing a formula that allows data to be shared and reused between the organizations involved, both within and outside the healthcare system, so that AI models can be trained in a secure manner. Respecting patients’ rights GMV is tackling this challenge through the TARTAGLIA project, which aims to implement AI mechanisms within federated data networks. This would prevent data from leaving their points of origin and avoid anonymization, with the consequent loss of quality and efficiency in the algorithms, facilitating the training of AI models in a distributed and secure manner, while respecting the rights of the data owners, that is, the patients. The company’s intention is for Spain to become a supplier of innovation rather than a mere consumer, and to do so, it must seize the opportunities that the National Health System offers because of its characteristics. The most important event in the calendar to find out where artificial intelligence is heading was opened by the First Vice-President and Minister for Economic Affairs and Digital Transformation, Nadia Calviño, who stressed the importance of harnessing the great potential offered by this set of disruptive technologies. To this end, she pointed out the need for “the entire digitalization process, hastened by the arrival of the pandemic, to take place in an environment of trust, in an inclusive and sustainable manner, and placing people at the center.” Carissa Véliz, an associate professor at the University of Oxford and the event’s keynote speaker, stressed the need for reflection on the importance of privacy in the digital context of AI, its best use, and respect for the rights of individuals. In turn, the Secretary of State for Digitalization and Artificial Intelligence stated in her closing remarks that “artificial intelligence is no longer the future, it is now.” The level in Spain is “amazing in terms of inclusion, sustainability, and health, where we have seen great examples at public and state level,” concluded Carmen Artigas. Print Share Related Healthcare 38th AMETIC Meeting on the Digital Economy and Telecommunications #Santander38 02 Sep - 04 Sep 9:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m. Healthcare Innovative Public Procurement Health Space 11 Jun - 12 Jun 9:00 am to 4:00 pm Healthcare AI can help with medical imaging training and diagnostic accuracy in primary care