Zafar turned to his microscope – a canonically beloved tool in pathology that the doctors rely on to help make their diagnoses.
It's an artificial intelligence-powered microscope built by Google and the U.S. Department of Defense.
The AI-powered tool is called an Augmented Reality Microscope, or ARM, and Google and the Department of Defense have been quietly working on it for years.
When a glass slide is prepared and fixed under the microscope, the AI is able to outline where cancer is located.
For many smaller health systems, digitization is not yet worth the hassle.
Persons:
Niels Olson, Nadeem Zafar, Zafar, Zafar's, Mitre Ashley Capoot, Mitre, it's, Ashley Capoot, CNBC Patrick Minot, Minot, Olson, It's, Aashima Gupta, Gupta
Organizations:
Microscope, U.S . Department of Defense, Google, CNBC, ARM, Department of Defense, Mitre, Minot, Defense Innovation Unit, U.S . Navy, Naval, Naval Medical Center
Locations:
Seattle, Mitre, Washington ,, DIU, Guam, U.S, Micronesia, San Diego, Mountain View , California