Babylon, which was founded in by entrepreneur Ali Parsa in 2013,
said it aims to offer health advice of family doctor quality by
using AI delivered through a smartphone app.
Its AI-powered chatbot tackled a representative sample of questions
set by the Royal College of Physicians for its final exams to
qualify as a family doctor, achieving an 81 percent success level,
well ahead of the average pass mark over the last five years of 72
percent, the company said.
In a separate test against seven highly experienced primary care
doctors, Babylon's AI correctly diagnosed 80 percent of illnesses,
against a range of 64-97 percent for the professionals, it said.
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Parsa said the results demonstrated that Babylon's AI could help
bring healthcare to millions of people who have no access to even
basic services.
"Even in the richest nations, primary care is becoming increasingly
unaffordable and inconvenient, often with waiting times that make it
not readily accessible," he said.
"Babylon's latest artificial intelligence capabilities show that it
is possible for anyone, irrespective of their geography, wealth or
circumstances, to have free access to health advice that is on-par
with top-rated practicing clinicians."
Babylon is one of a number of start-ups tapping into the promise of
AI to help patients and doctors sift through symptoms to come up
with a diagnosis. Others available in the UK include Ada and
Your.MD.
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Smartphone diagnosis is only one way in which AI is being harnessed
in healthcare.
Elsewhere, medtech companies are already using the pattern-spotting
power of computers to help interpret medical images, while many drug
companies are increasingly investing in AI-driven techniques in drug
discovery.
Babylon, which secured a $60 million investment last year, is
working with smartphone maker Samsung and Chinese internet firm
Tencent to roll out its technology.
Its app is allowing users in London to book appointments with family
doctors in seconds, it said, and have a video consultation typically
within two hours.
It is also helping more than 2 million people in Rwanda access
digital healthcare, which it said gives the East African nation the
highest penetration of digital health in the world.
(Reporting by Paul Sandle; editing by Stephen Addison)
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