Bill Betten has developed medical devices for decades, but he gained a deeper understanding after hearing a doctor speak the words "brain" and "tumor."
"It's a little different when it's going to be done to you," Betten recalled today during Medical Design & Outsourcing's latest podcast. (Hear more from Betten as editor Chris Newmarker interviews him at DeviceTalks Minnesota, Sept. 9–10 in Minneapolis. Go to minnesota.devicetalks.com and use the code “25OFF” to save 25% on the cost of registration.)
Betten's tumor, fortunately, was a benign meningioma, and he's presently four and a half months into a successful recovery from surgery. Now that he's past the health emergency, there are insights about medical devices that he once knew that he now feels to his core.
Hear more of Betten's insights in MDO's latest podcast, and find out more next week at DeviceTalks Minnesota.
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Bill Betten has developed medical devices for decades, but he gained a deeper understanding after hearing a doctor speak the words "brain" and "tumor."
"It's a little different when it's going to be done to you," Betten recalled today during Medical Design & Outsourcing's latest podcast. (Hear more from Betten as editor Chris Newmarker interviews him at DeviceTalks Minnesota, Sept. 9–10 in Minneapolis. Go to minnesota.devicetalks.com and use the code “25OFF” to save 25% on the cost of registration.)
Betten's tumor, fortunately, was a benign meningioma, and he's presently four and a half months into a successful recovery from surgery. Now that he's past the health emergency, there are insights about medical devices that he once knew that he now feels to his core.
Hear more of Betten's insights in MDO's latest podcast, and find out more next week at DeviceTalks Minnesota.
Artificial intelligence and medical devices: Why you need to care
MedicalDesign&Outsourcing
34 minutes 23 seconds
6 years ago
Artificial intelligence and medical devices: Why you need to care
Artificial intelligence presents a whole host of regulatory challenges when it comes to medical devices.
Regulatory consultant Mike Drues says he has had clients forced to dumb down their AI technology, with U.S. FDA requiring they lock the algorithm. Drues sees locking the machine learning algorithm is a Band-Aid solution — not a longterm fix.
Drues offered some ideas about how to better regulate AI in medical devices during Medical Design & Outsourcing's latest podcast.
MedicalDesign&Outsourcing
Bill Betten has developed medical devices for decades, but he gained a deeper understanding after hearing a doctor speak the words "brain" and "tumor."
"It's a little different when it's going to be done to you," Betten recalled today during Medical Design & Outsourcing's latest podcast. (Hear more from Betten as editor Chris Newmarker interviews him at DeviceTalks Minnesota, Sept. 9–10 in Minneapolis. Go to minnesota.devicetalks.com and use the code “25OFF” to save 25% on the cost of registration.)
Betten's tumor, fortunately, was a benign meningioma, and he's presently four and a half months into a successful recovery from surgery. Now that he's past the health emergency, there are insights about medical devices that he once knew that he now feels to his core.
Hear more of Betten's insights in MDO's latest podcast, and find out more next week at DeviceTalks Minnesota.