Oct 18, 2024  |  1:00pm - 6:00pm
T-CAIREM Talk (AI in healthcare)

Health AI Systems Thinking for Equity (HASTE) Workshop & Networking Event

Agile education

From the Temerty Centre for AI Research and Education in Medicine (T-CAIREM).

Open to all in the scientific community, including researchers, clinicians, research staff, trainees, and student learners.

Join AI health enthusiasts for a Health AI Systems Thinking for Equity (HASTE) workshop with Dr. Leo Celi from MIT Critical Data.

Dr. Celi developed this program to analyze, discuss, and mitigate unintentional data bias when using machine learning and generative AI to make healthcare decisions. Dr. Celi has successfully held 10 HASTE workshops at various universities in the U.S.

Participants will be divided into groups to analyze and discuss policies governing AI algorithms in medicine. It's a wonderful opportunity to learn from people with various backgrounds about the potential risks and rewards of AI health. 

Agenda

1:00 to 2:00 pm: Registration at 263 McCaul Street (College Street & McCaul Street), Toronto

2:00 to 2:30 pm: Introductory Remarks & Keynote Address by Dr. Leo Celi

2:30 to 5:00 pm: Workshop with participants

5:00 to 6:00 pm: Networking event

Food and light refreshments will be provided.

Where & when

Friday, October 18th

1 – 6 pm (ET)

In person only

263 McCaul Street
Toronto
M5T 1W5

Register via Eventbrite

About Dr. Celi

Leo Anthony Celi has practiced medicine on three continents, giving him broad perspectives on healthcare delivery. As clinical research director and principal research scientist at the MIT Laboratory of Computational Physiology (LCP), he brings together clinicians and data scientists to support research using data routinely collected in the intensive care unit (ICU). His group built and maintains the Medical Information Mart for Intensive Care (MIMIC) database. This public-access database has been meticulously de-identified and is freely shared online with the research community. It is an unparalleled research resource; over 2000 investigators from more than 30 countries have free access to the clinical data under a data use agreement. In 2016, LCP partnered with Philips eICU Research Institute to host the eICU database with more than 2 million ICU patients admitted across the United States. The goal is to scale the database globally and build an international collaborative research community around health data analytics.

Leo founded and co-directs Sana, a cross-disciplinary organization based at the Institute for Medical Engineering and Science at MIT, whose objective is to leverage information technology to improve health outcomes in low- and middle-income countries. At its core is an open-source mobile telehealth platform that allows for the capture, transmission and archiving of complex medical data (e.g. images, videos, physiologic signals such as ECG, EEG and oto-acoustic emission responses), in addition to patient demographic and clinical information. Sana is the inaugural recipient of both the mHealth (Mobile Health) Alliance Award from the United Nations Foundation and the Wireless Innovation Award from the Vodafone Foundation in 2010. The software has since been implemented around the globe, including India, Kenya, Lebanon, Haiti, Mongolia, Uganda, Brazil, Ethiopia, Argentina, and South Africa.

He is one of the course directors for HST.936—global health informatics to improve quality of care, and HST.953—secondary analysis of electronic health records, both at MIT. He is an editor of the textbook for each course, both released under an open-access license. The textbook Secondary Analysis of Electronic Health Records came out in October 2016 and was downloaded over 48,000 times in the first two months of publication. The course “Global Health Informatics to Improve Quality of Care” was launched under MITx in February 2017.

Leo was featured as a designer in the Smithsonian Museum National Design Triennial “Why Design Now?” held at the Cooper-Hewitt Museum in New York City in 2010 for his work in global health informatics. He was also selected as one of 12 external reviewers for the National Academy of Medicine 2014 report “Investing in Global Health Systems: Sustaining gains, transforming lives”.