Considered to be the most tech-infused demographic, born 2010-2025, Generation Alpha is growing up with AI benefiting their health and wellness, and technology infiltrating nearly every aspect of their lives. To review the survey data, and learn more about how health- and wellness-related AI technologies are benefiting humanity, please visit https://transmitter.ieee.org/health-2019.
Millennial parents would allow a 3D printed heart to be implanted in their children
Human donor organ availability can mean the difference between life and death. But researchers are using 3D printing technologies to develop organs, including hearts that use human cells, collagen and biological molecules.
For aches and pains -- goodbye medication, hello VR
Virtual reality-powered headsets can immerse people in 3D virtual environments and because of this distraction, VR is being used for pain management.
AI-powered virtual nurse? Not when our kids are in the hospital, U.S. and U.K. parents say
Though telehealth, AI and remote monitoring tools are helping nursing expand care beyond in-person bedside monitoring creating a practically virtual nurse, a majority of Millennial parents in the U.S. (67%) and U.K. (57%) would not be very comfortable leaving their child in the care of an AI-powered virtual nurse during a hospital stay. Conversely, a majority of millennial parents in China (88%), India (83%) and Brazil (61%) would be very comfortable leaving their child at the hospital in the care of an AI-powered virtual nurse.
U.S. millennial parents an exception to allowing robot surgery on children
Surgical robots powered by artificial intelligence are bringing new innovations and accuracy to the operating room.
Self-driving school buses -- stress relief for some parents, not others
Juggling work and transporting kids to school on time can be stressful for both parents and children. Autonomous technologies are being deployed in self-driving buses piloted around the world, but millennial parents are divided on how likely they would be to allow their child to take such transportation to school to minimise their stress, even if tested as safe and staffed by a caretaker robot.
A majority of American millennial parents (58%) and U.K. parents (51%) say they are not very likely to allow their child to take a self-driving bus to school while a clear majority of parents in China (91%), India (87%) and Brazil (67%) say they are very likely to allow their child to take such a self-driving bus to school to minimise their stress.
Rare genetic diseases in a snapshot
Machine learning is helping clinicians diagnose rare diseases by analysing patient photos and correlating detected irregularities with rare genetic diseases. Millennial parents concerned about their child are universally comfortable using this technology to seek answers, though those in Asia are the most comfortable.
Favourite recliner chairs could have health smarts too
AI and sensor technologies are powering a growing number of “smart” devices, from voice-enabled speakers to refrigerators with interior cameras that can monitor if milk is running low. In the future, smart furniture may be embedded with sensors that measure biometrics such as weight, blood pressure and heart rate. Universally, millennial parents would be very interested (U.S.: 63%; U.K.: 66%; Brazil: 86%; China: 92%; India: 94%) in having a smart chair in their home that could automatically conduct health tests.
AI accelerating as care preference during golden years (instead of relying on kids)
Overwhelmingly around the globe, millennial parents’ preference is strong for using AI to live independently during their golden years rather than relying on their Generation Alpha children, and has increased significantly over the past year across most regions.
Doctors using AI for kids’ cancer diagnoses sought
Artificial intelligence technologies are being used to improve diagnoses for certain types and grades of cancer. A majority of millennial parents worldwide say they would be very likely to seek out a doctor using AI for cancer diagnoses should their child or a family member need such an evaluation.
A majority of millennial parents in China (94%), India (88%) and Brazil (78%) would be very likely to seek out a doctor using AI for cancer diagnoses for their child or a family member, while 59% of U.K. parents and 53% of U.S. parents are very likely to do so.
Rise in parents likely to use chatbot pediatrician diagnoses
People are conversing with AI chatbots that compare symptoms against a database of diseases, patient history and circumstances, then recommend a course of action. For the second year in a row, IEEE asked millennial parents across the globe how likely they would be to use an AI and speech recognition-powered chatbot to diagnose their sick Generation Alpha child.