Q&A: Why medical AI and value-based care may be made for each other

At last count, the Food and Drug Administration has authorized 950 medical devices that use artificial intelligence and machine learning. But far fewer have made a significant impact on patient care in the United States. 

For medical AI developers like James Zou, that’s a problem. The Stanford professor is invested in getting effective medical machine learning — including some of his own, FDA-cleared algorithms — adopted by health systems.

advertisement

In two recent papers, Zou examined the clinical adoption of medical AI devices, finding that a tiny minority of FDA-authorized devices are being reimbursed at any kind of scale — and delving into different models for how health systems could pay for medical AI. 

STAT+ Exclusive Story

STAT+

This article is exclusive to STAT+ subscribers

Unlock this article — and get additional analysis of the technologies disrupting health care — by subscribing to STAT+.

Already have an account? Log in

View All Plans

To read the rest of this story subscribe to STAT+.

Subscribe

Michigan Cannabis Sales Sink

Michigan cannabis sales for January were were down sequentially after a lift in December. At $242.8 million, sales plunged 13.5% sequentially after setting a record in December.

Read More »