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Artificial Intelligence: Saving Lives in Critical Conditions

February, 14
10:00–11:30
Digitalization and AI Technologies
World Trade Center Moscow, entrance No. 4, 2nd floor, conference hall 5
AI has multiple and varied applications in the care of critically ill patients. It also has enormous potential for delivering emergency care and improving patient care outcomes. Methods and algorithms found in artificial intelligence and machine learning are already being used in real clinical practice. Today, these methods are being developed and applied in predominantly diagnostic areas, which use programmes that analyse data from patient records in order to recognize and identify patterns in them. In the nearest future, artificial intelligence has all the prerequisites to be actively utilized to predict a patient’s deteriorating condition and whether the disease is progressing. Likewise, AI can monitor changes in pathological processes, carry out continual pain assessment of patients in intensive care units, as well as provide prompt assistance to doctors in making complex clinical decisions. In addition, by 2030, we should expect AI to be an integral part of treatment algorithms, not only within medical decision support systems, but also in surgery, anaesthesiology, and resuscitation. What are the key principles for creating AI systems, and why are they needed? What are the potential applications of artificial intelligence in critical care? What are the most promising areas for the practical application of AI systems in the medicine of the future? What challenges does AI need to overcome today before it becomes a routine part of clinical practice? How can artificial intelligence revolutionize the care of critically ill patients and dramatically improve the efficiency of healthcare systems in the near future?
Moderator:
Boris Axelrod
Chairman of the Board, Moscow Scientific Society of Anesthesiologists and Resuscitators; Head of the Department of Anesthesiology and Reanimation, Russian National Research Center of Surgery named after B.V. Petrovsky
Panellists:
Sergey Bagnenko
Chief Freelance Specialist in Emergency Medical Services of the Ministry of Health of the Russian Federation; Rector, Pavlov First St. Petersburg State Medical University of the Ministry of Health of the Russian Federation
Artem Kuzovlev
Deputy Director – Head, V.A. Negovsky Scientific Research Institute of General Reanimatology; Vice President, Federation of Anaesthesiologists and Reanimatologists (FAR)
Irina Pakhomova
Head of the Development of Information Systems in Anesthesiology and Resuscitation Group, Information Technology Center, Academician B.V. Petrovsky Russian Scientific Centre of Surgery
Sergey Petrikov
Director, N.V. Sklifosovsky Research Institute for Emergency Medicine
Denis Protsenko
Chief Freelance Specialist in Anesthesiology and Resuscitation of Moscow Healthcare Department; Director, Kommunarka Multidisciplinary Clinical Center
Valery Subbotin
Head of the Center for Anesthesiology and Resuscitation, Loginov Moscow Clinical Scientific Center; Leading Researcher, Laboratory of Clinical Pathophysiology of Critical States, V.A. Negovsky Scientific Research Institute of General Reanimatology
Boris Teplykh
Chief of the Department of Anesthesiology and Intensive Care, N.I. Pirogov National Medical and Surgical Center of the Ministry of Health of the Russian Federation
Sergey Tsarenko
Chief Freelance Specialist in Anesthesiology and Resuscitation of the Ministry of Health of the Russian Federation; Director, National Medical Research Center "Treatment and Rehabilitation Center" of the Ministry of Health of the Russian Federation
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