IBM's Watson could usher in new era of medicine
'Dr. Watson' could act as a physician's assistant, sorting electronic medical histories and even diagnosing patients
Computerworld - The game-show-playing supercomputer Watson is expected to do much more than make a name for itself on Jeopardy.
IBM's computer could very well herald a whole new era in medicine.
That's the vision of IBM engineers and Dr. Eliot Siegel, professor and vice chairman of the University of Maryland School of Medicine's department of diagnostic radiology.
Siegel and his colleagues at the University of Maryland and at Columbia University Medical Center are working with IBM engineers to figure out the best ways for Watson to work hand in hand with physicians and medical specialists.
Siegel, who refers to the computer not as the champ of Jeopardy but as "Dr. Watson," says he expects the computer, which can respond to questions with answers rather than with data and spread sheets, to radically improve doctors' care of their patients.
"There is a major challenge in medicine today," Siegel told Computerworld. "There's an incredible amount of information in a patient's medical record. It's in the form of abbreviations and short text. There's a tremendous amount of redundancy, and a lot of it is written in a free-form fashion like a blog or text.
"As a physician or radiologist, it might take me 10 or 20 or 60 minutes or more just to understand what's in a patient's medical record," he said.
Within a year, Siegel hopes that "Dr. Watson" will change all of that. Watson is expected to be able to take a patient's electronic medical records, digest them, summarize them for the doctor and point out any causes for concern, highlighting anything abnormal and warning about potential drug interactions.
"It offers the potential to usher in a whole new generation of medicine," Siegel said. "If all Dr. Watson did was allow me to organize electronic medical records and bring to my attention what's most important and summarize it, that would be incredibly valuable to me.
"Even small things that Watson can do will change the way I, and my colleagues, practice medicine," he said.
Richard F. Doherty, research director at analysis firm Envisioneering Group, said he's excited to have a computer organize his medical history for his physician.
"That sounds excellent," Doherty said. "I think we've all been through the situation of filling out forms for new doctors, and then they don't have the time to read through it all, and they just say, 'What? You have a sore throat?' Having Watson help attend to our needs sounds like a great application of [the computer]."
But organizing and summarizing patient histories isn't all Watson is expected to do.
Siegel, who also works with the National Cancer Institute, said he's hoping that Watson will also be able to take patient and treatment information from hundreds, if not thousands, of hospitals and pull it all together.
Supercomputers
- Supercomputer to connect to 400PB of storage via Ethernet
- Intel acquires HPC interconnect assets from Cray
- Big Data in the Real World Isn't So Easy
- Intel 'superchip' will be aimed at high-performance computing
- IBM's Watson expands cancer care resume
- Europe Outspends U.S. on Exascale
- Oak Ridge lab to deploy fast Titan supercomputer
- Europe plans exascale funding above U.S. levels
- Cray courts the big-data market
- Russia building 10-petaflop supercomputer


- Excel 2010 Cheat Sheet
- Register for this Computerworld Insider Cheat Sheet and gain access to hundreds of premium content articles, guides, product reviews and more.
- Deliver Cost-Effective Business Continuity with Extreme Capacity
- IBM DB2 provides application cluster transparency technology that equips organizations running OLTP applications with the ability to deliver high availability and continuous uptime...
- Practice Management: Double Billing Rate and Improve Patient Services
- Would you like to double your billing rate and achieve faster payment for services?
Download this customer success story to see how One Health... - Mission Critical Data Explosion and Customer Case Study
- Would you like to double your tier 1 storage capacity while simultaneously reducing your storage footprint?
Download this customer success story to see how... - Protecting Against Database Attacks and Insider Threats: Top 5 Scenarios
- Read this new eBook to learn the top five scenarios and essential best practices for preventing database attacks and insider threats.
- Database Activity Monitoring Is Evolving
- Read the analyst report and learn how you can leverage the core capabilities of a DAP solution for better database security. All Mainframes and Supercomputers White Papers
- Distributed Database Security with Real-time Monitoring
- View this demo and learn how IBM InfoSphere Guardium database activity monitoring can help protect your sensitive data in distributed DBMS environments with...
- InfoSphere Warehouse Packs Demo
- These flash modules make warehousing more tangible and relevant to business users through detailed explanations of the InfoSphere Warehouse Packs.
- Delivery Management -- Extending Lifecycle Management
- Date: Wednesday, June 20, 2012, 1:00 PM EDT
Siloed organizations continue doing the wrong things and doing things wrong, leading to increased costs,... - Leverage automation today to reduce IT complexity
- Date: Tuesday, June 5, 2012, 2:00 PM EDT
Whether your B2B complexity is caused by multiple technologies due to M&A, business or application specific... - Redefine Expectations in the Data Center
- Need to do more with less? Watch this video to learn how HP ProLiant Gen8 servers can help your business deploy servers three... All Mainframes and Supercomputers Webcasts
