AI Lab will ‘train’ algorithms and develop frameworks, Hancock says
- 5 September 2019
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The newly announced National Artificial Intelligence (AI) Lab will be used to ātrainā algorithms and develop āethicalā frameworks, Matt Hancock has said.
Appearing via video at NHS Expo, the health secretary said the lab was part of a āmajor transformationā to improve digital health and patient experience.
ā[The lab] will boost the national research capability with a controlled environment where we can train algorithms, trial new concepts and scale up the best ideas,ā he told the audience in Manchester.
āCrucially, it will ensure we get the right laws and ethical frameworks in place as well as the right technology. This is ultimately what it is all about.
āWe care about the technology because we care about people. Clinicians will have more time to look after their patients and themselves and patients will be more in control of their own health and their own healthcare.ā
Hancock was due to appear at a session hosted by NHSX on day two of NHS Expo, but was ultimately a no-show.
Addressing the audience in a pre-recorded video instead, the health secretaryĀ made reference to the new GP IT Futures framework, which he said was the ānext stepā in making medical records easily accessible.
āIt will be as easy for a GP surgery to switch provider as it is for a small business to switch bank accounts. That is why weāve published the framework – to bring modern, standards-based infrastructure to primary care and making sure weāve got consistent functionality across all of general practice,ā he added.
āStarting from January, under the new contract, providers will have to show that their systems are interoperable, secure [and] easily upgradable, or they will not get that contract.ā
On NHSX, Hancock said the organisation brought together the āpowers, money and policy leadersā to further technology in the NHS.
āWe started the journey to agree a common language of technical standards, so systems can talk to each other and the essential diagnostic information can get where itās needed,ā he added.
āWe need a shared language for recording diagnoses and medicines, a consistent way of capturing and exchanging information, and open standards published on the web.
āThis isnāt just some niche issue driven by tech geeks and enthusiasts and open data obsessives. This is about saving lives and making life easier for staff.ā
Read more:
- Early adopters āshould be celebrated as much as innovatorsā
- CCIO says better infrastructure and training needed to reap benefits of tech
- Simon Stevens calls for greater investment in diagnostics at NHS Expo