Close Menu
KumbhCoinorg
    What's Hot

    'Significant' personal tax allowance rise on cards

    February 16, 2026

    Payjoin Foundation Gains 501(c)(3) Status, Enabling Tax-Deductible Donations For Bitcoin Privacy Development

    February 16, 2026

    'It's never too late': Savannah Guthrie's new plea for mother's release as FBI analyses glove

    February 16, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • 'Significant' personal tax allowance rise on cards
    • Payjoin Foundation Gains 501(c)(3) Status, Enabling Tax-Deductible Donations For Bitcoin Privacy Development
    • 'It's never too late': Savannah Guthrie's new plea for mother's release as FBI analyses glove
    • Crypto Launchpad Projects Starting This Week
    • Will Jacks stars as England seal Super Eights spot with 24-run win vs Italy | Cricket News
    • Carnegie Mellon leads, MIT follows: Top 5 US universities that received the most foreign funding in 2025
    • Why is Crypto Down Today? Bitcoin ETF Outflows Hit $410M As Standard Chartered Slashes BTC, ETH, SOL, XRP Targets
    • Fiserv Launches INDX, a 24/7 Dollar Rail for Crypto Firms
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    KumbhCoinorg
    Monday, February 16
    • Home
    • Crypto News
      • Bitcoin & Altcoins
      • Blockchain Trends
      • Forex News
    • Kumbh Mela
    • Entertainment
      • Celebrity Gossip
      • Movie & TV Reviews
      • Music Industry News
    • Market News
      • Global Economy Insights
      • Real Estate Trends
      • Stock Market Updates
    • Education
      • Career Development
      • Online Learning
      • Study Tips
    • Airdrop News
      • Ico News
    • Sports
      • Cricket
      • Football
      • hockey
    KumbhCoinorg
    Home»Market News»Can AI help modernise Ireland’s healthcare system?
    Market News

    Can AI help modernise Ireland’s healthcare system?

    kumbhorgBy kumbhorgFebruary 28, 2025No Comments5 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Can AI help modernise Ireland’s healthcare system?
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email Copy Link

    Padraig Belton

    Technology Reporter

    Mater Exterior of the Mater hospital in DublinMater

    The Mater hospital in Dublin – home to Ireland’s busiest emergency department

    For a country famous as Big Tech’s European address, Ireland’s hospitals often lag far behind in technology.

    They lack shared computerised patient records, or unique identifiers to track people when they move between clinics.

    In July 2024, a computer system failure made Dublin’s Mater hospital push back surgeries and beg people not to come to its A&E.

    Three years before, Russian ransomware attackers shut down the Irish health system’s entire computer network, and published 520 people’s medical records online.

    But Ireland now has ambitious goals to modernise its healthcare.

    That includes a programme called Sláintecare. Announced in 2017, the plan is to use some of its €22.9bn (£20bn; $24bn) budget surplus to create a healthcare service that is free at the point of care, like the UK’s or Canada’s.

    To improve healthcare, pinch points like diagnostics will have to be improved.

    It’s a problem being tackled at Dublin’s Mater hospital, 164-years-old and the location of Ireland’s busiest emergency department.

    That’s especially so in winter, when one day early this January Irish A&E departments had 444 people on trolleys waiting to be seen.

    “In Ireland, the big problem we have is waiting lists, and in particular waiting for diagnostics, for MRI [magnetic resonance imaging] or CT [computed tomography] scans,” says Prof Peter McMahon, a consultant radiologist at the Mater.

    Because of Prof MacMahon, who as a medical student dabbled as a hobbyist programmer, the Mater is now among the first hospitals in Ireland to use artificial intelligence (AI) across its radiology department – the part of a hospital providing medical imaging to diagnose diseases and guide treatment.

    To make sure patients with the most urgent needs are seen first, Prof MacMahon says: “We use AI to immediately analyse all head scans for bleeds, all chest scans for blood clots, and all bone x-rays for fractures.”

    The AI is particularly helpful in assisting younger doctors, when they don’t have experienced consultants to turn to.

    “Now a nurse or junior doctor at 2am isn’t alone, they’ve got a wing man,” he says.

    Mater Hospital Prof Peter McMahon, a consultant radiologist at the Mater, sits in front of screens showing medical scans.Mater Hospital

    Prof Peter McMahon introduced AI to scanning at Dublin’s Mater hospital

    Rural hospitals face different kinds of challenges.

    Letterkenny University Hospital in Donegal is without MRI facilities at evenings and weekends.

    Currently, a patient urgently needing an MRI scan at night can face an ambulance ride to Dublin.

    But now, Prof MacMahon and the Mater’s AI research fellow Paul Banahan have trained a trial AI model to create a “synthetic MRI” from CT scans, to immediately triage patients with suspected spinal injuries.

    That was done by feeding a “generative AI” model around 9,500 pairs of CT and MRI images of the same area on the same person.

    Now the AI can predict what the MRI scan would look like from the CT scan, something available in all emergency departments.

    And since radiology scans also come with doctors’ text reports, he is also exploring using large language models to identify important disease patterns and trends.

    Peter MacMahon AI identifies a fracture in a scan of a footPeter MacMahon

    Ireland keeps digital scans in a central digital library

    Applying AI to medical images in Ireland is easier since the country has stored scans in a central, digital filing system since 2008.

    But a lot of other important information, like medical notes or electrocardiograms (ECGs), remains largely in paper format in most Irish hospitals, or in smaller databases that are not shared centrally.

    That will “severely delay” applying AI to spot potential diseases and improve clinical care, points out Prof MacMahon.

    Ageing IT systems in Irish healthcare are more broadly a challenge.

    “Quite bluntly, a lot of hospitals are dealing with legacy IT systems where they’re just trying to keep the show on the road,” says Dr Robert Ross, a senior computer science lecturer at Technological University Dublin.

    “Doing anything else like integrating AI is not easy to do,” he says.

    Using AI in healthcare is not without problems.

    An example here is AI speech-recognition tools. Using them could let doctors spend less time on note-taking and report writing.

    But some have been found to make things up, including to invent non-existent medication.

    To prevent such AI from hallucinating, “you need to make sure it’s penalised in its training, if it gives you something that doesn’t exist,” says Prof MacMahon.

    AIs can have biases, but “humans have biases too”, he points out.

    A tired doctor, expecting a young patient to be healthy, can overlook their blood clot.

    “For whatever reason we’re far more open to accept human error”, than in new health technology where “the acceptable risk is zero”, says Prof Seán Kennelly, a consultant at Tallaght University Hospital and professor at Trinity College Dublin.

    This means we “continue with the illusion of 100% accuracy in humans”, and ignore areas where AI-supported technology can make better clinical decisions, he says.

    Tallaght University Hospital Professor Seán Kennelly and Dr Aidan BoranTallaght University Hospital

    Prof Seán Kennelly (right) and Dr Aidan Boran

    Healthcare regulators, who already have a “weak enough” understanding of software as a medical device, haven’t at all caught up with rules for AI, says Dr Aidan Boran, founder of an Irish medical tech start-up called Digital Gait Labs, and a researcher at Dublin City University.

    For example, getting a CE mark, which shows that a medical device meets EU safety regulations, includes providing details about the factory where the product is manufactured.

    But in the case of software that is not relevant says Dr Boran. “For us, manufacturing literally means copying software,” he points out.

    AI can have a black box problem: we can see what goes in them and what comes out, but the deep learning systems that power these models are so complex that even their creators do not understand exactly what happens inside them.

    That can create difficulties for a doctor trying to explain treatment decisions that involve AI, says Dr Paul Gilligan, head of St Patrick’s Mental Health Services, one of Ireland’s largest mental health providers that runs St Patrick’s Hospital in Dublin.

    When AI influences their decisions, doctors need to “be able to articulate the reasoning behind those decisions in a manner that is accessible and understandable to those affected,” he says.

    More Technology of Business
    Healthcare Irelands modernise System
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Previous ArticleAnjali Anand: Jayaji threw us a party at her home | Hindi Movie News
    Next Article NHL Rumors: Yanni Gourde, Jordan Binnington, Quinton Byfield, Mikko Rantanen, and Alex Tuch
    kumbhorg
    • Website
    • Tumblr

    Related Posts

    Market News

    'Significant' personal tax allowance rise on cards

    By kumbhorgFebruary 16, 2026
    Global Economy Insights

    Sweet Supply and Bitter Scarcity: Why Your Valentine’s Chocolates Cost More This Year

    By kumbhorgFebruary 16, 2026
    Stock Market Updates

    IMFA: Doubling Up

    By kumbhorgFebruary 16, 2026
    Market News

    ByteDance to curb AI video app after Disney legal threat

    By kumbhorgFebruary 16, 2026
    Global Economy Insights

    Camilan Manis Gurih Yang Membuat Hati Bahagia

    By kumbhorgFebruary 15, 2026
    Market News

    Gender pay gap won't close for another 30 years, warns trade unions group

    By kumbhorgFebruary 15, 2026
    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply

    Don't Miss

    'Significant' personal tax allowance rise on cards

    By kumbhorgFebruary 16, 2026

    The treasury minister prepares to deliver a budget with a “significant rise” in personal allowances.

    Payjoin Foundation Gains 501(c)(3) Status, Enabling Tax-Deductible Donations For Bitcoin Privacy Development

    February 16, 2026

    'It's never too late': Savannah Guthrie's new plea for mother's release as FBI analyses glove

    February 16, 2026

    Crypto Launchpad Projects Starting This Week

    February 16, 2026
    Top Posts

    Satwik-Chirag storm into China Masters final with straight-game win over Malaysia | Badminton News

    September 21, 2025132 Views

    SaucerSwap SAUCE Crypto Breaks Key Resistance Amid Nvidia-Hedera Deal

    July 15, 202545 Views

    Unlocking Your Potential with Mubite: The Future of Crypto Prop Trading

    September 17, 202533 Views

    Stablecoins 2025 Exchange Reserves: Insights into DeFi Trends

    September 8, 202532 Views
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • Vimeo
    About Us

    Welcome to KumbhCoin!
    At KumbhCoin, we strive to create a unique blend of cultural and technological news for a diverse audience. Our platform bridges the spiritual significance of the Kumbh Mela with the dynamic world of cryptocurrency and general news.

    Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest WhatsApp
    Our Picks

    'Significant' personal tax allowance rise on cards

    February 16, 2026

    Payjoin Foundation Gains 501(c)(3) Status, Enabling Tax-Deductible Donations For Bitcoin Privacy Development

    February 16, 2026

    'It's never too late': Savannah Guthrie's new plea for mother's release as FBI analyses glove

    February 16, 2026
    Most Popular

    7 things to know before the bell

    January 22, 20250 Views

    Reeves optimistic despite surprise rise in UK borrowing

    January 22, 20250 Views

    Barnes & Noble stock soars 20% as it explores a sale Barnes & Noble stock soars 20% as it explores a sale

    January 22, 20250 Views
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Privacy Policy
    • Contact Us
    • About Us
    © 2026 Kumbhcoin. Designed by Webwizards7.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.