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So where is this going?

This isn’t science fiction, it’s just looking at what people are doing now and extrapolating out 3-5 years. Today, homes are filling up with more and more sensors. Not specialist medical devices, but things like Amazon Alexa and Google Home. They are becoming more powerful, and more able to pick up measurements that are important for healthcare, things like activity patterns.

Then there’s wearable devices like Apple Watch that can sense step count, pulse, oxygen saturation. Over the next five years they will probably be able to measure blood glucose levels. If you think people like tracking their steps, wait until they can track blood sugar!

A lot of healthcare is all about confidence and trust. There’s been countless times when my arrival on the scene as a doctor has defused a patient’s anxiety just because they trusted me. All I’ve done is spoken to people and nothing else. I believe that machines can help build that trust.

Keith Grimes - Clinical Artificial Intelligence & Innovation Director at Babylon Health

With all this data, and with really strong human services to back it up, it will be possible to help patients and families to develop the trust and confidence to stay at home and avoid a trip to the doctors or a routine hospital appointment.

A lot of healthcare is all about confidence and trust. There’s been countless times when my arrival on the scene as a doctor has defused a patient’s anxiety just because they trusted me. All I’ve done is spoken to people and nothing else. I believe that machines can help build that trust.

There’s still a lot to do. For every group, every condition, we need to collect the data, develop the processes, and gradually build up that confidence so that in the right circumstances, more people can stay at home, which is better for everyone.

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