 
 
The next time you go to the doctor, you may be dealing with a supercomputer rather than a human. Watson,
  the groundbreaking artificial intelligence machine from IBM that took 
 on chess champions and Jeopardy! contestants alike, is about to get its
 first real-world application in the healthcare sector. In partnership with health benefits company WellPoint,
  Watson will soon be diagnosing medical cases – and not just the  
everyday cases, either. The vision is for Watson to be working  
hand-in-surgical-glove with oncologists to diagnose and treat cancer in patients.
 
 The WellPoint clinical trial, which could roll out as early as 2012, is
  exciting proof that supercomputing intelligence, when properly  
harnessed, can lead to revolutionary breakthroughs in complex fields  
like medicine. At a time when talk about reforming the healthcare system
  is primarily about the creation of digital health records, the  
integration of Watson into the healthcare industry could really shake  
things up. By some accounts, Watson
 is able to process as many as 200 million pages of medical information 
 in seconds – giving it a number-crunching head start on doctors for  
diagnosing cases. In one test case cited by WellPoint, Watson was able  
to diagnose a rare form of an illness within seconds – a case that had  
left doctors baffled.
 The WellPoint clinical trial, which could roll out as early as 2012, is
  exciting proof that supercomputing intelligence, when properly  
harnessed, can lead to revolutionary breakthroughs in complex fields  
like medicine. At a time when talk about reforming the healthcare system
  is primarily about the creation of digital health records, the  
integration of Watson into the healthcare industry could really shake  
things up. By some accounts, Watson
 is able to process as many as 200 million pages of medical information 
 in seconds – giving it a number-crunching head start on doctors for  
diagnosing cases. In one test case cited by WellPoint, Watson was able  
to diagnose a rare form of an illness within seconds – a case that had  
left doctors baffled.
 
While having super-knowledgeable medical experts on call is exciting,
  it also raises several thorny issues. At what point – if ever - would 
 you ask for a “second opinion” on your medical condition from a human  
doctor? Will “Watson” ever be included in the names of physicians  
included in your HMO listings? And, perhaps most importantly, can  
supercomputers ever provide the type of bedside manner that we are  
accustomed to in our human doctors?
 
 This last question has attracted much attention from medical practitioners and health industry thought leaders alike. Abraham Verghese,
  a professor at the Stanford University School of Medicine as well as  
bestselling author, has been particularly outspoken about the inability 
 of computers to provide the type of medical handholding that we are used to from human doctors.
  Verghese claims that the steady digitization of records and clinical  
data is reducing every patient to an "iPatient" – simply a set of  
digital 1’s and 0’s that can be calculated, crunched, and computed.  
Forget whether androids dream of digital sheep – can they take a digital Hippocratic Oath?
 This last question has attracted much attention from medical practitioners and health industry thought leaders alike. Abraham Verghese,
  a professor at the Stanford University School of Medicine as well as  
bestselling author, has been particularly outspoken about the inability 
 of computers to provide the type of medical handholding that we are used to from human doctors.
  Verghese claims that the steady digitization of records and clinical  
data is reducing every patient to an "iPatient" – simply a set of  
digital 1’s and 0’s that can be calculated, crunched, and computed.  
Forget whether androids dream of digital sheep – can they take a digital Hippocratic Oath?
 
Given that the cost of healthcare is simply too high, as a society we
  will need to accept some compromises. Once the healthcare industry is 
 fully digitized, supercomputers like Watson could result in a more  
cost-effective way to sift through the ever-growing amount of medical  
information and provide real-time medical analysis that could save  
lives. If Watson also results in a significant improvement in patient  
treatment as well, it’s clear that the world of medicine will never be  
the same again. Right now, IBM envisions Watson supplementing – not  
actually replacing - doctors. But the time is coming when nurses across 
 the nation will be saying, “Watson -- Come Here –- I Need You,” instead of turning to doctors whenever they need a sophisticated medical evaluation of a patient.