Newsletter signup

Health

  • Forty hours is full time, Donnelly says
    U.S. Sen. Joe Donnelly is trying to change the definition of a full-time worker in the federal health care law so that employers won’t cut employees’ hours to avoid providing them with medical insurance.
  • Disability claims ease as the economy heals
    The number of U.S. workers filing long-term disability claims declined for the first time in at least four years in 2012 amid an improving economy and employment picture.
  • Changes to Medicare may increase savings, confusion to diabetics
    Medicare begins a major change next month that could save older diabetics money and time when they buy crucial supplies to test their blood sugar – but it also may cause some confusion as patients figure out the new system.
Advertisement

IBM's Watson offered commercially

WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. – Dr. Watson is accepting new patients.

IBM says two medical applications using the Watson supercomputer are being offered for commercial use.

One application helps diagnose and treat lung cancer. The other helps manage health insurance decisions and claims.

Both applications take advantage of the speed, huge database and language skill the computer has already demonstrated. It defeated the best human “Jeopardy!” players on television two years ago.

Watson’s medical training comes through pilot programs at WellPoint health insurance and Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York.

IBM says the computer’s database now includes 1,500 lung cancer cases from the hospital and 2 million pages of medical textbooks and journals.

The company says Watson also learned by being corrected when it came up with wrong answers as it was questioned by doctors.

Advertisement