sábado, 23 de maio de 2026

The Harvard’s Study and the Portuguese Unicorn That Devoured a German Rival

A study published in Science by researchers from Harvard Medical School has established a milestone in the evolution of AI-assisted medicine that is difficult to ignore: an OpenAI reasoning model outperformed experienced physicians in diagnosing and managing patients in a Boston emergency department using only electronic health records.  https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.adz4433

But the deepest consequence of this breakthrough may not be felt first in Boston, London, or Berlin. It may be felt in rural villages, underserved regions, and low-income communities where hospitals are distant, doctors are scarce, and medical consultations remain out of reach. According to the 2025 WHO and World Bank UHC report, 4.6 billion people still lack full access to essential health services. For them, an AI diagnostic system available through a smartphone would not be a luxury. It could be the first real gateway to clinical guidance, early detection, and lifesaving care.

In this context, Sword Health deserves particular attention. The Portuguese unicorn is already applying AI to healthcare at global scale and, as of February 2026, says it has treated more than 700,000 patients across its AI care platform while delivering over 10 million AI care sessions. Its recent $285 million acquisition of German rival Kaia Health, expanding its reach in the United States while opening a major foothold in Germany’s reimbursed digital-health market, shows that AI medicine is no longer a distant promise but an emerging international infrastructure for prevention, treatment, rehabilitation, and follow-up care. https://19-pacheco-torgal-19.blogspot.com/2025/11/the-deepening-roots-of-portuguese.html 

PS - This revolution also challenges medical education. Students now entering medical schools may need far more than technical excellence. They will need deeper formation in ethical judgment, responsibility, trust, compassion, and empathy — the human values that should guide the use of increasingly powerful machines.Yet even this frontier is becoming more complex. A recent study by Swiss researchers suggests that AI can be perceived as more empathetic than humans. https://www.nature.com/articles/s44271-025-00258-x