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Bringing medical care home, THIS new AI platform may prevent your next hospital visit

While conventional systems wait for symptoms to surface, iLive Connect uses AI-driven predictive analytics to see what the human eye cannot

Representative image | Shutterstock

A new AI-driven ecosystem is redefining patient care by bringing the hospital to the home. Led by medical experts, the platform monitors chronic health data in real time, intervening early to stop the progression of disease before it reaches a crisis point.

At the core of the ecosystem- iLive Connect- is a small wireless biosensor patch paired with a wearable wristband, which continuously captures vital parameters. 

Dr Rahul Chandola, cardiothoracic surgeon and founder of iLive Connect, said that the data is transmitted wirelessly to a secure Cloud-based platform and further relayed to a dedicated medical command centre. 

Specialised doctors monitoring in real time is manning the command centre. 

Unlike the traditional monitors that respond to illness, iLive Connect predicts. While conventional systems wait for symptoms to surface, iLive Connect uses AI-driven predictive analytics to see what the human eye cannot. By detecting subtle physiological shifts before clinical symptoms even emerge, it offers a crucial head start in treating the disease.

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This early identification allows doctors to intervene at a preventive stage, significantly reducing complications, avoiding medical emergencies, and decreasing the need for repeat hospitalisation, Chandola told PTI. 

The development of the AI-driven system addressed one of the biggest gaps in healthcare, the absence of continuous medical supervision once a patient leaves the hospital. 

Chandola notes that the most critical medical events often occur in the "blind spot" of home care. "iLive Connect closes this gap by merging continuous monitoring with proactive supervision. Our system identifies physiological deterioration before it becomes a crisis, allowing for medical guidance that prevents routine conditions from escalating into emergencies," said Chandola. 

Dr Viveka Kumar, co-founder at iLive Connect and senior interventional cardiologist, said that the technology has shown particular benefits for senior citizens living alone, patients with chronic illnesses, and individuals recently discharged from hospitals. 

Kumar highlighted that the integration of AI with continuous clinical oversight has enabled rapid response times and timely medical intervention in several potentially critical situations.

"Unlike conventional wearable devices that only display health data to users, iLive Connect functions as a doctor-led continuous care ecosystem, where technology supports clinical decision-making rather than replacing it," Kumar said.

The platform enables access to specialist supervision irrespective of geography, allowing patients in remote regions of the country to receive advanced medical monitoring without frequent hospital visits, the statement said.