The Harry Glorikian Show

Harry Glorikian
The Harry Glorikian Show

At The Harry Glorikian Show, I, Harry Glorikian, am your host. In short, I have talks with leaders in the healthcare & life sciences industry about the ongoing data-driven transformation of their industry. From new ways to diagnose & treat patients, bring down costs & creating new value, all the way to AI algorithms that increase efficiency & accuracy, better data is revolutionizing healthcare. I turn to doctors, hospital administrators, IT directors, entrepreneurs, & others for help mapping out the changes & their impact on everyone from patients to researchers. Welcome to the show!

  1. Raffi Krikorian Says "We Don't Have Much Time Left" to Rein in AI

    9 AVR.

    Raffi Krikorian Says "We Don't Have Much Time Left" to Rein in AI

    Harry's guest this week is Raffi Krikorian, chief technology officer and managing director at Emerson Collective, the social change organization founded by Laurene Powell Jobs. Krikorian is the former vice president of engineering at Twitter (now X), where he was responsible for getting rid of the Fail Whale and making the company’s backend infrastructure more reliable; the former director of Uber's Advanced Technology Center in Pittsburgh, where he oversaw the launch of the world's first fleet of self-driving cars; and then the chief technology officer at the Democratic National Committee, where he helped rebuild the party's technology infrastructure after the Russian hacking debacle of 2016. At Emerson Collective, Krikorian built the technology organization, leads the development of data products, and works to upgrade the back offices of the non-profits Emerson works with. On top of all that, he recently launched a podcast called Technically Optimistic, where he’s taking a deep dive into the way AI is challenging us all to think differently about the future of work, education, policy, regulation, creativity, copyright, and many other areas. The show is a must-listen for anyone who cares about how we can build on AI to transform society for the better while minimizing the collateral damage. Harry talked with Krikorian about why he moved to Emerson Collective, why and how he started the podcast, and what he really thinks about what government should be doing to prepare for the waves of social change AI will bring.

    59 min
  2. How ConcertAI Came to Lead in Cancer Data

    30 JANV.

    How ConcertAI Came to Lead in Cancer Data

    If you look back at all the health-tech and drug development companies Harry has hosted on the show, an interesting pattern starts to emerge: a very large number of those companies have gone on to enormous growth and success in their markets. It could be that being on the podcast is like a catapult to success—or it could be that we're pretty good at finding companies that are already on a promising trajectory. Either way, there's no better example than Concert AI. The company’s CEO, Jeff Elton, first spoke with Harry back in July of 2021. At that time, the company was already one of the leaders in gathering and analyzing broad collections of data about cancer patients involved in clinical trials for new treatments. Its specialty was, and is, going beyond the very specific endpoints measured in clinical trials and looking to electronic medical records, genome sequencing data, insurance claims data, and other sources in order to build a more comprehensive picture of cancer patients and their journeys through the healthcare system. That kind of data can be very useful to companies trying to track the performance of their drugs after they’ve reached the market, and to researchers planning new clinical trials. And since that first conversation, the company has grown by leaps and bounds. It’s taken over management of more data sources, including the massive CancerLinq database formerly maintained by the American Society of Clinical Oncology. It’s struck up partnerships with some of the leading technology startups, research centers, and drug companies working to beat cancer. And it’s leaning hard into the new wave of deep-learning AI tools and their potential to help find patterns in vast amounts of data about patients. It’s probably safe to say that ConcertAI has gathered up more data about cancer patients than any other company on the planet. And investors have been rushing to pour money into the company, on the conviction that data is going to be the key to getting more and better cancer drugs to market. That’s certainly Jeff Elton's conviction too, as you’ll hear in today's interview.

    1 h
  3. AI and Microbiomes 101 with Jona

    05/12/2023

    AI and Microbiomes 101 with Jona

    The microbiome has been getting more and more attention from researchers and doctors now that we’re starting to have the tools we need to identify and measure all those microbes and see what they’re up to. Harry's guest this week is serial healthcare and AI entrepreneur Leo Grady, whose company Jona is on a mission is to help patients and physicians keep up with the skyrocketing amount of scientific literature about the microbiome and try to translate it into real steps people can take to improve their health. If you’re a Jona customer, you start by sending in a fecal sample. Then the company uses a large-scale gene sequencing technique called shotgun metagenomics to get a profile of all the microbes in your GI tract. Since everyone’s microbiome contains a different mix of microbes, the next step is to use large language models to sift through the published science about the microbiome and find the studies that relate to the specific bugs in your microbiome. Then the company gives patients and their doctors a report that parses out whether their microbiome makeup might be contributing to their health problems, and whether there might be any health or nutritional interventions that would help. It’s all in the early stages. And right now Jona’s test is mostly available through concierge medical services, executive health clinics, and other offices that do a lot of cash-pay tests. But Grady thinks that over the long term the service has the potential to turn the microbiome from a former black box into something closer to what he calls an “organ of data”—meaning, a part of the body that doctors can, in a sense, visualize and analyze in the same way we can use MRI and other forms of imaging to scan our other organs.

    54 min
4,9
sur 5
56 notes

À propos

At The Harry Glorikian Show, I, Harry Glorikian, am your host. In short, I have talks with leaders in the healthcare & life sciences industry about the ongoing data-driven transformation of their industry. From new ways to diagnose & treat patients, bring down costs & creating new value, all the way to AI algorithms that increase efficiency & accuracy, better data is revolutionizing healthcare. I turn to doctors, hospital administrators, IT directors, entrepreneurs, & others for help mapping out the changes & their impact on everyone from patients to researchers. Welcome to the show!

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