Health systems including Rochester, Minn-based Mayo Clinic, Gainesville, Fla.-based UF Health and Somerville, Mass.-based Mass General Brigham have received a $23.5 million grant to advance the use of artificial intelligence in intensive care units, Becker’s reports.
The project aims to create a dataset of 100,000 anonymous patients that will generate biomedical data to augment physicians’ rapid decision-making in diagnosing, treating and monitoring critically ill patients.
The program, which is funded by the National Institutes of Health’s Bridge to Artificial Intelligence, is known as the Patient-Focused Collaborative Hospital Repository Uniting Standards for Equitable AI, or CHoRUS. Read more.