AI to Transform Healthcare, Reduce Doctor Burden: Anupriya Patel

Union Minister of State for Health Anupriya Patel emphasized that Artificial Intelligence can significantly reduce the routine workload of doctors while asserting it cannot replace them. She called for AI literacy within the medical community to help achieve goals of inclusivity and health equity. NITI Aayog member V.K. Paul noted AI will have its greatest impact in the health sector, improving clinical care and public health approaches. Patel highlighted that India's governance model uses AI as a strategic force multiplier to tackle unique challenges like its vast population and dual disease burden.

Key Points: AI in Healthcare to Reduce Doctor Workload, Says Minister

  • AI reduces routine doctor workload
  • AI literacy needed in medical fraternity
  • AI tools must be trustworthy and validated
  • AI addresses India's unique health challenges
  • Strategic tech integration in healthcare framework
3 min read

Union MoS Health Anupriya Patel pushes for AI literacy, says "will reduce doctor's burden of routine work"

Union Minister Anupriya Patel advocates for AI literacy in healthcare to reduce routine burdens on doctors and achieve health equity in India.

"AI can support the doctors and reduce the burden of their routine work, but it can never take their place. - Anupriya Patel"

New Delhi, February 17

Union MoS for Health and Family Welfare Anupriya Patel on Tuesday stressed on the use of Artificial Intelligence in the health sector, adding that it cannot take place of doctors, but reduce the burden of their routine work.

She also pushed for literacy in the health sector towards AI which can further help in achieving the goal of inclusivity and health equity.

"AI can support the doctors and reduce the burden of their routine work, but it can never take their place. What we need today is that our medical fraternity needs to be AI literate and help us achieve the goal of inclusivity and health equity," Anupriya Patel told reporters.

Meanwhile, Niti Aayog member VK Paul asserted that AI would have the greatest impact on the health sector, noting that its tools would improve clinical care, strengthen health system functioning, enhance preventive approaches, and strengthen public health efforts.

"AI is going to impact health sector the most and AI tools will improve our clinical care, health system functioning, preventive approaches as well as they will strengthen and energise the public health approaches. AI tools must be developed responsibly, they need to be trustworthy, validated, and they should be properly taken through the path of technical validity, clinical validity and utility," Paul told ANI.

On Tuesday, while addressing the AI Impact Summit, Anupriya Patel highlighted the transformative role of artificial intelligence (AI) in healthcare.

Speaking at the AI Impact Summit in the national capital, Patel asserted that India's governance model positions AI as an enabler and force multiplier, bringing the country closer to the goals of inclusivity and health equity.

"The real measure of the power of AI lies in the extent to which it is able to touch, it is able to address the health inequities. That's the governance model we follow, in which AI becomes an enabler and a force multiplier, and it is able to take us closer to the goals of inclusivity and health equities," Anupriya Patel said.

She noted that India faces unique challenges due to its vast and diverse population, the rural-urban divide, and the dual burden of communicable and non-communicable diseases. Patel emphasised that technology is being strategically integrated into the national healthcare framework to address these challenges, generating real-time alerts for disease outbreaks and strengthening disease surveillance nationwide.

"India has unique challenges: our vast and diverse population, rural and urban divide, and also the dual burden of non-communicable as well as communicable diseases. So, when we look at these unique challenges, it becomes extremely important that we make use of technology, and we have had a comprehensive technological integration in our national healthcare framework, which we don't see as only adoption of technology, but a strategic response to the unique challenges that we have used," said Anupriya Patel.

The India AI Impact Summit is a five-day programme anchored in three foundational pillars, or "Sutras": People, Planet, and Progress.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Rohit P
Good to see the government thinking ahead. But the real challenge is implementation and infrastructure. Will our PHCs and CHCs in villages have the internet connectivity and hardware to run these AI tools? The digital divide is real. 🤔
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Aman W
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Sarah B
As someone working in public health, I appreciate the focus on "health equity." If designed well, AI can help standardize care and reduce disparities. The point about real-time disease surveillance is crucial for a country as populous as India.
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Vikram M
While the intent is good, I'm concerned about data privacy. Our health data is very sensitive. Who will own it? How will it be protected? We need strong laws and ethical frameworks before we jump headfirst into AI healthcare. Jai Hind.
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Karthik V
Finally! This can reduce waiting times in government hospitals. Imagine an AI system triaging patients or managing appointments. The doctor's burden will reduce significantly. Hope they start training our medical students on this ASAP. 👍
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Nisha Z
I respectfully disagree with the notion that AI will never replace doctors. For basic consultations in remote areas, a well-trained AI with telemedicine support might be the only "doctor" people can access. We should be open to it augmenting and, in some limited cases, substituting, to

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