Microsoft Unveils AI Diagnostic Orchestrator That Beats Doctors and Reduces Costs
UNITED STATES AND UNITED KINGDOM, JUN 30 – Microsoft's AI Diagnostic Orchestrator achieved 85.5% accuracy in diagnosing complex cases while reducing diagnostic costs by 20%, outperforming physicians who averaged 20% accuracy, the company said.
- Microsoft unveiled the AI Diagnostic Orchestrator on Monday, which diagnosed cases four times more accurately than 21 experienced physicians using 304 complex case studies.
- The technology builds on Microsoft AI's health effort launched in late 2024, addressing the high rates of medical misdiagnosis and costly health spending in the US.
- The system, MAI-DxO, solved cases with 85.5% accuracy and cut diagnostic costs by 20% by selecting less expensive tests more efficiently than doctors.
- Mustafa Suleyman, Microsoft AI CEO, called this "a big step towards medical superintelligence," while Microsoft stressed AI complements rather than replaces clinicians, who provide empathy and judgment.
- Microsoft is conducting further trials with health systems to validate this AI's clinical use, acknowledging that doctors' roles will evolve but remain essential in patient care.
66 Articles
66 Articles
Super artificial intelligence beats doctors. Tested on more than 300 impossible cases capable of achieving accuracy in diagnosis 4 times higher than that...
AI 'Dramatically Better' Than Doctors, Microsoft Says
Microsoft announced a new tool powered by artificial intelligence that claims to be far more accurate than experienced physicians. Microsoft … Read More The post AI ‘Dramatically Better’ Than Doctors, Microsoft Says appeared first on Charisma News.
How AI can help ease the strain on health care services
CNN’s Clare Sebastian visits Philips in the Netherlands, where the company has centered its focus on innovations in the health care tech sector, including the use of artificial intelligence in some of the most commonly used diagnostics tools in the world.
According to the results revealed on Monday, its new intelligence system would surpass human doctors in the analysis of complex medical cases.
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 40% of the sources lean Right
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium