Generative AI in Your Desk Drawer: LLMs for Everyone

Very large health care systems and academic medical centers can employ programmers to create their own LLMs, according to David Kereiakes, managing partner at Windham Venture Partners. In addition to patient data, they ingest organizational data such as how frequently a provider sees patients, the number of procedures performed, etc. Some of these providers also partner with large tech companies. He says that these providers refuse to share data to create larger data sets because of the proprietary value of that data (with privacy concerns playing a minor role). He also says that organizations have invested a lot in cleaning up their data, sometimes putting their clinicians to work to upgrade its quality. But what about small providers, rural providers, and front-line facilities? Where will they get the resources to derive the critical efficiency improvements that generative AI can offer them? Democratizing Generative AI Sarah Nagy, founder and CEO of Seek AI, says that small providers don’t have to “rebuild the wheel.” Vendors can offer them turn-key LLM solutions that they interact with either through their web browsers (a very convenient option for those lacking trained programmers), or, through an API as suggested by Jean-Claude Saghbini, President of the Lumeris Value-Based Care Enablement business.@Wolters_Kluwer Dr. Rowland Illing, chief medical officer and director of global healthcare and non-profits at Amazon Web Services (AWS), says they are ...
Source: EMR and HIPAA - Category: Information Technology Authors: Tags: Administration AI/Machine Learning C-Suite Leadership Health IT Company Healthcare IT Hospital - Health System IT Infrastructure and Dev Ops Administrative Burden Alex Tyrrell Amazon Bedrock Amazon Q Amazon Web Services Artificial Source Type: blogs