LAS VEGAS — It took 12 doctors at six health systems across four states to diagnose top Trump administration official Amy Gleason’s daughter with a rare immune disease.
But that was before artificial intelligence. As she’s explained over and over while promoting the administration’s efforts to make “health technology great again,” it doesn’t have to be that way today.
“I truly believe that if she had been diagnosed now instead of in 2010, AI could have picked up what she had way faster than a year and three months it took,” Gleason, the acting administrator of the U.S. DOGE Service and a strategic adviser to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, told attendees at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas last week.