
AI is better at diagnosis than a doctor
Study shows artificial intelligence made more optimal recommendations and fewer harmful decisions than did physicians.

Study shows artificial intelligence made more optimal recommendations and fewer harmful decisions than did physicians.

Impilo’s prototype platform scours medical records to pinpoint symptoms of unusual illnesses that are often overlooked by health systems.

Kahun’s intelligent chatbot is designed to aid in the diagnostic process in conjunction with one’s physician.

Olive Diagnostics plans on monitoring people’s health and sending out alerts even before symptoms arrive.

Israel’s Diagnoz.me proposes a new home-based approach to diagnosing infections: a disposable smartphone add-on that analyzes bodily fluid samples.

The $5 diagnostic kit will enable quick, quantitative diagnosis currently conducted only in hospitals and labs.

Two-thirds of the world population is infected with H. pylori bacteria. An Israeli company offers the most advanced diagnostic system to find it.

URINFO, a new medical device from Israel inspired by agricultural technology, takes the guesswork out of diagnosing a kidney injury.
The simple new check shows a 90 percent detection rate in clinical tests for multiple types of cancers.

Israel’s Itamar Medical has developed a breakthrough device to diagnose sleep apnea, and a test for early onset of arteriosclerosis and heart disease.