VA signs $6 million contract for IBM Watson to advise PTSD treatment
Washington Post
By Mohana Ravindranath
December 15, 2014
The Department of Veterans Affairs is planning to use IBM’s Watson — the Jeopardy! winning supercomputing system designed to simulate human cognition — to advise doctors on treatment for post-traumatic stress disorder patients, IBM announced on Monday.
As part of a two-year, multi-million dollar contract, IBM plans to install Watson software at the Department’s data center in Austin, Tex. The total contract is valued at $16 million, according to IBM, though the initial set-up and assessment phase is worth about $6 million.
Watson is designed to crunch large volumes of medical literature, clinical data and personal electronic medical records to suggest the treatment options it deems most appropriate for individual patients. Physicians can type questions in natural language, and Watson spits out a series of options, ranked by its confidence in each method’s success.
“Physicians can save valuable time finding the right information needed to care for their patients” with Watson technology, interim undersecretary for health Carolyn Clancy said in a statement. “A tool that can help a clinician quickly collect, combine and present information will allow them to spend more time listening and interacting with the Veteran.”
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Monday, December 15, 2014
VA spending $16 million on IBM Watson computer for PTSD?
Spending $16 million on Watson doesn't make sense when they should have spent money on Sherlock to find out where all the other money they spent went. After all, more suicides after billions a year spent to reduce them doesn't take a genius to figure out veterans have been placed in jeopardy.
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