S2E8 - Digital twins and misinformation: AI as a health compass
Certified copy: digital twin and medical truth to save lives
What if your doctor could only see 100 pieces of a puzzle that has 285,000 pieces?
In this episode, we discover that in Quebec, launching a clinical research project can take up to three years... whereas in Abu Dhabi, the same process takes three months, and the Emirati government has literally rewritten its legislation to welcome a Quebec startup.
Louis-Philippe Noël, president of BioTwin, explains how a few drops of blood are enough to create a digital twin capable of simulating cancer treatments before they are even administered to a patient—a technology that could have saved 88% of women with ovarian cancer from unnecessary and painful treatments.
Lina Forcier, CEO of Factually Health, reveals that at one point, 40% of ChatGPT's training data came from Reddit, making it the equivalent of an unverified forum for health information.
This episode redefines what it means to "innovate in healthcare" when the biggest obstacle is not science, but the system.