UK

NHS to use AI ‘alarm system’ to prevent future patient safety scandals in world-first

NHS is to analyze hospital data and use the alarm on potential patient safety scandals early in the first world.

Death patterns, serious injuries, abuse or other events that are not detected will be detected.

The movement, which is part of a new 10 -year plan for health care, is watching a series of scandal in NHS.

These include the Chester Hospital Counts, where he served all his life orders after he served seven more babies and decided to kill seven more babies of the middle personnel and nurse Lucy Letby, whom he had predicted up to 1,200 patients as a result of bad care.

The waiting list for treatment in NHS hospitals in the UK has decreased to the lowest level in two years (William Barton/Alamy)

The waiting list for treatment in NHS hospitals in the UK has decreased to the lowest level in two years (William Barton/Alamy)

At the beginning of this month, Health Secretary Wes Streeting announced a national investigation into “systemic” failures in birth care after families called the truth.

Mr. Streeting said that the AI ​​plan would make it easier to identify danger signs earlier.

A new birth AI system will begin in NHS Troves from November to sign that “close real -time data” to mark the higher mortality rates, dead birth and brain damage than expected.

Mr. Streeting said: “Most of the treatments in NHS are safe, but even a single jump that risks a patient is too much.

“Behind each security violation, a person, a changing life, a devastated family, sometimes a heartbreaking loss.

“By embracing artificial intelligence and introducing the world’s first early warning systems, we will identify dangerous signs earlier and start rapid inspections before the damage is seen.

“This technology will save lives, will catch insecure care before tragedy.

“It is a vital part of our commitment to carrying NHS from analog to digital, providing a better, safer care for everyone.”

Health Secretary Wes Streeting (Lucy North/PA)

Health Secretary Wes Streeting (Lucy North/PA) (Pa wire)

In places where AI flags are concerned, expert teams will be sent from the Maintenance Quality Commission (CQC) for research.

NHS’s joint national medical director Professor Meghana Pandit said that UK will be the first country in the world and that it would be the first country to try a AI warning system to mark patient safety problems that will quickly analyze reports sent by medical staff from community environments.

“Movement will complete the speed and efficiency that we determine patient safety concerns and that we can quickly respond to improve patient care.”

Sir Julian Hartley, General Manager of CQC, said the movement will allow health care to “develop a stronger focus on all dimensions of quality”.

However, nursing leaders expressed their concerns that they could lead to other ways of increasing the ignorance of patient safety.

Nicola Ranger Secretary General of the Royal Nursing College: “The guaranteed way to improve care is to raise the personnel levels.

“Technology will always play a role, but it is the place to start investing in order to have the right number of personnel on the façade and to secure patients.”

At the weekend, the health secretary promised to use technology as a “great social level, and said that the robots wanted to do one in eight operations by 2035.

On Sunday, the government announced that supermarkets and other major retailers will work to cut calories in the average shop.

The reports also show that after Mr. Streeting calls “more constructive and less checkers ,, some of the NHS may be for Chop.

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