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Google Cloud partners with DeliverHealth to enhance healthcare documentation with AI

Google Cloud on Thursday announced a collaboration with DeliverHealth, a healthcare clinical documentation company, for healthcare providers to document patient care. The collaboration is aimed at offering a solution that is accurate, fast and medically specific by combining Google Cloud’s Gemini 1.5 Pro multimodal artificial intelligence (AI) models with DeliverHealth’s repository of 150,000 audio hours of human-curated medical notes every month, Google said.

Through this collaboration, Google Cloud’s generative AI capabilities will allow clinicians to document patient care through voice, from operative reports, lab result summaries, radiology reads and inpatient notes. This can reduce administrative burdens on clinicians, while ensuring precise, billable documentation, Google said.

Bikram Singh Bedi, managing director, Google Cloud, India, said, “By automating tedious tasks and improving efficiency and accuracy, we aim to help clinical documentation, allowing clinicians to focus more on patient care.”

“We can bring precise and intuitive medical speech engine in healthcare directly to those on the frontlines,” said Sasanka Yellamanchali, chief executive, DeliverHealth. “Clinicians can simply speak and get structured, billable documentation. It’s about giving caregivers more time and peace of mind to focus on caring for patients.”


Google on Thursday hosted an AI Startups Summit in Bengaluru where a number of programmes and partnerships for accelerating the growth of AI startups were announced.

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These programmes support early-stage AI founders by helping them gain customers for their solutions using Google Cloud.The company recently introduced the Emerging ISV Partner Springboard, a 12-week programme for accelerating growth of AI startups.

Participants will receive support for building go-to-market assets, access to Google AI experts for product refinement, guidance on technical architecture, best practices, and streamlined onboarding to Google Cloud marketplace.

Manish Gupta, senior director, research, Google DeepMind, said, “These initiatives will provide critical support and resources to early-stage founders, helping them build and scale AI-powered businesses.”

Early-stage founders will receive support through the Google for Startups Cloud Programme, which will now provide $200,000 in Google Cloud credits over two years.

AI startups will receive support with $350,000 in credits, to meet the increased computational demands of AI development.

The company has also partnered with Y Combinator to provide access to Nvidia H100 graphics processing units and Google Cloud tensor processing units, cloud credits, support and mentorship to its summer 2024 cohort of AI startups.

Google is also collaborating with early-stage accelerators and incubators, including 500, StartX and Berkeley Skydeck, to provide early-stage founders with a package of Google Cloud credits, expert guidance and technical workshops.

The company also announced that it is launching Startup School: GenAI, a four-week immersive training programme designed for startups to leverage AI.

Since October 29, this free online series has been offering live, interactive classes led by Google AI experts.

Participants will gain practical experience with generative AI, explore the latest Google Cloud AI innovations and learn best practices for developing and deploying AI solutions.

The curriculum covers a range of topics, from foundational concepts to advanced techniques, equipping startups with the knowledge and skills needed to build AI products and services.

Content Source: economictimes.indiatimes.com

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