How Ont. hospitals are using AI to advance healthcare

Hospitals across the province are exploring how artificial intelligence (AI) can be used to advance healthcare.
At Grand River Hospital (GRH) in Kitchener, it’s helping staff predict changes in patient needs.
Over the last year, the hospital has partnered with the company Signal 1 to pilot an AI powered system meant to support clinical decisions.
It works by taking patient data and running it through an AI algorithm, which then makes predictions about whether a patient may be nearly ready to be discharged or if they might need a higher level of care.
“It will make a prediction as to whether the patient is predicted to potentially improve or their condition deteriorate,” explained Carla Girolametto, GRH director of innovation.
Those predictions can help doctors with early intervention. It has the potential to free up beds sooner, helping with capacity issues.
The hospital said it also allows them to manage their staffing resources better.
In Toronto, St. Michael’s Hospital is using AI to detect delirium – a serious change in mental abilities resulting in confused thinking and lack of awareness.
“Once it occurs, it’s very consequential,” Dr. Fahad Razak, internist at St. Michael’s Hospital, said. “It will double the chance that you end up in a nursing home, for example. It doubles to the risk of dying in hospital and it increases cost by on average about $11,000 per patient.”
Dr. Razak’s team uses an AI tool that combs through patient notes to make sure a delirium diagnosis doesn’t get overlooked.
“It’s increased the recognition of delirium from missing 75 per cent of cases to now 90 per cent accuracy in capturing where delirium is occurring. So that’s a remarkable advance,” Dr. Razak said.
Dr. Razak said potential future uses of AI in healthcare are exciting.
“The promise of what AI can deliver to the system is something I think has galvanized and excited people more than any other innovation I've seen in the last decade.”
Both hospitals said AI tools are meant to support not replace human interaction.
“It will never replace the human factor,” Girolametto said. “It will never replace clinician judgment. So the clinical decisions, the treatment decisions are not made by a ‘robot’ or technology tool.”
CTVNews.ca Top Stories

U.S. assassination attempt charges 'confirm' Trudeau's claims about India had 'real substance,' former national security advisers say
The indictment of an Indian national for the attempted assassination of a Sikh separatist and dual U.S.-Canadian national 'validates' Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's allegations that the Indian government may have been involved in the killing of a Canadian citizen as having 'real substance,' according to two of Canada's former national security advisers.
Bonnie Crombie wins Ontario Liberal leadership after 3 rounds of voting
Ontario Liberals have selected Bonnie Crombie, a three-term big city mayor and former MP who boasts that she gets under the skin of Premier Doug Ford, as their next leader to go head to head with the premier in the next provincial election.
Trump calls Biden the 'destroyer' of democracy despite his own efforts to overturn 2020 election
Former U.S. president Donald Trump on Saturday attempted to turn the tables on his likely rival in November, President Joe Biden, arguing that the man whose election victory Trump tried to overturn is "the destroyer of American democracy."
Search for runaway kangaroo in Ontario continues
The search continues for the kangaroo that is hopping around somewhere in Ontario after it escaped zoo handlers from a transport truck Thursday night.
What was a hospital like in medieval times? Researchers analyzed 400 skeletons to find out
In medieval times, hospitals took care of the 'poor and infirm,' but how were inhabitants selected and what were their lives like? Researchers analyzed 400 skeletons to find out.
James Webb Telescope confirms existence of massive dusty galaxy from early universe
New observations from the James Webb Space Telescope have confirmed the existence of a massive, dusty, star-forming galaxy which was first spotted years ago by a ground telescope, but was completely invisible to the Hubble Space Telescope.
Rocky planets may be able to form under more high-stress scenarios than previously known: study
A study of one of the most extreme, radiation-heavy environments in the universe has found that it might be possible for rocky planets comprised of water, carbon and other familiar molecules to form under far more intense circumstances than previously believed.
Teen girls are being victimized by deepfake nudes. One family is pushing for more protections
A mother and her 14-year-old daughter are advocating for better protections for victims after AI-generated nude images of the teen and other female classmates were circulated at a high school in New Jersey.
7.6 magnitude earthquake strikes off the southern Philippines and a tsunami warning is issued
A powerful earthquake with a preliminary magnitude of 7.6 struck Saturday off the cost of the southern Philippines island of Mindanao and Philippine authorities issued a tsunami warning.