試す 金 - 無料
MEET DR. DOMUCH
India Today
|January 26, 2026
AI WILL BE A FORCE MULTIPLIER IN SHAPING REAL CLINICAL OUTCOMES AND TRANSFORMING HOW HEALTHCARE REACHES THE UNDERSERVED WHILE FORCING HARD QUESTIONS ON REGULATION
Artificial Intelligence has crossed a critical threshold in healthcare. We are no longer debating whether AI can work in clinical care—we are now grappling with how it should work, who it should serve, and under what guardrails it must operate. As we move into 2026, ΑΙ promises to reshape diagnostics, personalise treatment pathways and even influence how clinical trials and experiments are designed. Yet alongside this promise lie fundamental challenges around liability, regulation, trust and the evolving role of clinicians.
Al's earliest successes in healthcare were largely technical—recognising patterns in images, signals and large datasets faster than humans could. Today, that capability is translating into real clinical value. In radiology and pathology, AI systems are demonstrating their ability to flag subtle abnormalities, prioritise high-risk cases and reduce diagnostic delays, particularly in primary care and preventive health. AI is enabling risk stratification at scale—identifying individuals who may otherwise never enter the healthcare system until disease has progressed.
At Niramai, we have seen this firsthand through Thermalytix, an AI-based breast cancer screening solution that combines thermal imaging with machine learning to detect early physiological changes associated with malignancy. The technology itself is important, but the larger lesson is this: AI can extend clinical reach. It can bring screening and triage closer to where people live and work, rather than forcing healthcare to remain confined within hospital walls.
このストーリーは、India Today の January 26, 2026 版からのものです。
Magzter GOLD を購読すると、厳選された何千ものプレミアム記事や、10,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスできます。
すでに購読者ですか? サインイン
India Today からのその他のストーリー
India Today
Curves in the Right Places
The straight and narrow, are no longer the most wanted in design. India Today HOME finds out that curved forms continue to rule decor, furniture and objects
1 min
January 26, 2026
India Today
Out of the Blue and on Your Walls
This one's a lesson in effortless, layered luxury that stands out
1 min
January 26, 2026
India Today
The New Lived-in Chic
Move over picture-perfect spaces on social media, 2026 is all about interiors that look homey, comfortable, charater-filled and embrace imperfections, shares Ruchika Baid
1 mins
January 26, 2026
India Today
Artisanal Luxe
If 2025 saw us appreciate craftsmanship, this year will see interiors celebrate it as he maps the renewed movement for all things beautiful and traditional
1 mins
January 26, 2026
India Today
Travel Dreams, Hand-Drawn
AN EXHIBITION AT GURUGRAM'S HERITAGE TRANSPORT MUSEUM TRACES HOW HAND-DRAWN POSTERS SHAPED INDIA'S TRAVEL IMAGINATION
1 mins
January 26, 2026
India Today
WHEN CHATBOTS AND CHALK BOARDS ARE PALS IN THE CLASSROOM
WITH AI TOOLS BEING TESTED IN CLASSROOMS AROUND INDIA, SOLID STANDARDS AND POLICY RESPONSES ARE CRITICAL TO ADVANCE LEARNING AND TEACHING OUTCOMES
3 mins
January 26, 2026
India Today
PLUG INTO THE FUTURE
Can your house anticipate your needs? Muskan Salgia highlights how smart home technology is becoming less visible and more intuitive this year
2 mins
January 26, 2026
India Today
Creative Calling
From material-led works to younger collectors, Jaya Asokan guides us through the changing landscape on the canvas and beyond
2 mins
January 26, 2026
India Today
THE BOTANICAL ROOTS OF EMPIRE
AN EXHIBITION OF COLONIAL BOTANICAL ART AT LONDON'S KEW GARDENS GIVES INDIAN ARTISTS THEIR DUE
3 mins
January 26, 2026
India Today
THE MACHINE THAT NOW RUNS MONEY
FROM CREDIT SCORES TO TRADING FLOORS, AI IS BECOMING THE CENTRAL ACTOR IN AN AUTOMATED ECONOMY. THIS IS ALSO ALTERING THE FOUNDATIONS OF TRUST, RISK AND BEHAVIOUR
5 mins
January 26, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
