
It’s perfect time to use AI in healthcare.
AI systems are able to learn incomparably faster than human beings. This allows us to develop artificial experts tutored in numerous institutes in a short time.
In real life, the answers to the questions “what’s good?” or “what’s ethical?” varies among people, not always agreed upon. However, we believe that businesses must follow explicit and concrete ethical standards in order to be predictable, always on the same side and consistent on how they act.
Regardless of our start-up form, knowing that our work is closely related with human anatomy and our scientific solutions have the potential to affect human health, we keep the world’s most important health and research oaths.
We at Nerveblox, promised to invent smart things while following these set of standards:
Declaration of Helsinki is a statement of ethical principles for medical research involving human subjects, including research on identifiable human material and data. The declaration was developed by World Medicine Association (WMA) in 1964 and last updated at 64th WMA General Assembly in 2013.
Good Clinical Practice (GCP) is an international ethical and scientific quality standard for designing, conducting, recording and reporting trials that involve the participation of human subjects. Compliance with this standard provides public assurance that the rights, safety and well-being of trial subjects are protected, consistent with the principles that have their origin in the Declaration of Helsinki, and that the clinical trial data are credible.
AI systems are able to learn incomparably faster than human beings. This allows us to develop artificial experts tutored in numerous institutes in a short time.