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Researchers have developed AI that can predict future diseases

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A new AI system may soon predict a person’s future health decades in advance. It's raising hopes for prevention, but also questions about trust and data.

Artificial intelligence has rapidly moved from the realm of science fiction into hospitals and clinics.

Since its public breakthrough in 2022, the technology has reshaped industries from finance to education, and now, it’s transforming healthcare.

According to a new study published in Nature and based on research from the UK Biobank, scientists have developed an AI system called Delphi-2M that may forecast an individual’s risk of developing certain diseases long before symptoms appear.

How Delphi-2M works

Unlike traditional diagnostic tools, Delphi-2M doesn’t focus on a single illness.

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Instead, it analyzes massive health datasets, including medical histories, age, lifestyle habits, and clinical records, to identify patterns linked to more than a thousand conditions.

Trained on information from over 400,000 UK participants and tested on nearly two million people in Denmark, the model reportedly predicted health outcomes with remarkable precision.

Researchers found its mortality forecasts reached a score of 0.97, where 1 would indicate perfect accuracy.

Still, experts caution that such results depend heavily on the data’s quality.

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As scientists often warn about the results. If the datasets contain biases, for example, underrepresenting older or less healthy populations, the predictions may also reflect those gaps.

Promise and caution ahead

Doctors and data scientists see huge potential for preventive medicine.

Tools like Delphi-2M could help anticipate age-related diseases and guide early interventions long before illness develops.

Yet, the technology also raises ethical questions about privacy, consent, and fairness.

Also read: The most beautiful boys’ names in the world, according to science

Sources: El Confidencial, and Nature.

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