Skip to main content
Email

The latest news in Healthcare IT – straight to your inbox.

Home
  • Main Menu
  • Subscribe
  • Topics
    • Video
    • Analytics
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Cloud Computing
    • EHR
    • Government & Policy
    • Interoperability
    • Patient Engagement
    • Population Health
    • Precision Medicine
    • Privacy & Security
    • Telehealth
    • Women In Health IT

Regions

  • ANZ
  • ASIA
  • EMEA
  • Global Edition
By: 

Sponsored

EMEA
Artificial Intelligence

AI brings real-time data-driven risk evaluation to the operating room

ORs are high-risk, high-cost environments where patient safety depends on the clinician’s ability to predict surgical risk. The Caresyntax surgical intelligence platform promises personalised interventions, tailored treatments and improved outcomes.
By: 
October 24, 2024
06:57 AM

Photo: Caresyntax

Traditional surgical risk calculators and assessment methods can struggle to account for a patient’s unique health situation, making accurate risk prediction a major challenge and increasing the possibility of complications throughout surgery. The consequences for surgeons, patients and healthcare systems can be significant: patient distress, poor outcomes and increased healthcare expenses. 

So, it is no coincidence that AI has emerged as a crucial tool for evaluating risks in the operating room. The Caresyntax surgical intelligence platform combines the benefits of predictive data analytics and machine learning in an advanced solution, capable of tailoring risk evaluation to the specific health backgrounds of individuals, ensuring better patient safety and more efficient healthcare.

Harnessing the power of operating room data

Caresyntax's vendor-neutral surgery platform uses AI to analyse the vast amounts of data generated in modern operating rooms to improve patient outcomes, enhance surgical efficiency, and reduce healthcare costs. By enabling better decision-making and resource allocation, Caresyntax helps hospitals reduce clinical waste, optimise the use of scarce surgical resources, and significantly lower costs associated with surgical operations.

The platform analyses data from all sources in the operating room – video, audio, images, devices, clinical and operational – and can draw on more than three million surgical records to provide the surgical team with actionable insights before, during and after surgery. This is a good example of how AI-driven models can use predictive analytics to mine past data and identify future outcomes, while those models also learn and adapt continuously to understand complex relationships and patterns within the data.

Insights on the go

"Our platform addresses the pressing need for data-driven insights in the operating room, where even small improvements can have a profound impact on patient safety and hospital efficiency," says Björn von Siemens co-founder of Caresyntax.

Caresyntax software is already delivering the benefits of AI-powered risk mitigation in key surgical settings. It is being used to predict surgical site infections, achieving up to 80% sensitivity in identifying patients at high risk of infection. Elsewhere, its ClipAssistNet tool is providing surgeons with real-time feedback during laparoscopic and robotic surgeries. In cholecystectomies (gallbladder removal) for example, it analyses video data to ensure that the clip applier is visible and alerts the surgeon when visibility is poor.

Putting patient safety first

The use of AI in clinical settings demands ethical implementation, and Caresyntax software is compliant with multiple regulatory patient privacy and data protection mandates, including GDPR in the EU and HIPAA in the US, where it is also registered as a Patient Safety Organisation (PSO). 

“Looking ahead, the impact of AI in predicting surgical risk extends far beyond immediate advancements,” says von Siemens. “The integration of AI has the potential to reshape the surgical care continuum, driving a shift towards more proactive and patient-centered care.

“As Caresyntax continues to innovate, the future holds immense promise for further advancements, including enhanced predictive capabilities, broader applications, and increased accessibility of this life-saving technology.”

The company was recently awarded the German AI prize, sponsored by Axel Springer/Bild. The prize is one of the largest AI awards in Europe and recognises outstanding achievements in the development and application of artificial intelligence across all industries. Von Siemens says the award validates the company’s progress so far in its mission to make surgery smarter and safer.

For more information, visit caresyntax.com. 

Topics: 
Analytics, Artificial Intelligence

More regional news

Businessperson viewing graphs on a tablet

AIDAVA is harnessing data altruism to advance personalised medicine

By
Aline Noizet
April 01, 2025
NHS logo

NHS England to be scrapped, reimagined with streamlined tech focus

By
Andrea Fox
March 17, 2025
home healthcare worker with a patient

The future of care: Nurses in 2030

By
Aline Noizet
March 11, 2025
Want to get more stories like this one? Get daily news updates from Healthcare IT News.
Your subscription has been saved.
Something went wrong. Please try again.

Top Story

home healthcare worker with a patient
The future of care: Nurses in 2030

Most Read

How UCHealth is reducing fall injuries with AI-enhanced risk modeling
2025: AI enhances personalized care; caregiver experience in the spotlight
Frontera launches with $32M in seed funding
Australia infuses $85M in digital mental health and more briefs
Korea University Medical Center pursues brain, heart AI development and more briefs
Roundup: AI and cloud tackle cyber risk and improve workflows

Research

White Papers

More Whitepapers

Telehealth
Create secure, connected omnichannel communications
Telehealth
Let us guide you to HIPAA compliance
Cloud Computing
How a cloud communications platform puts connection at the center of care

Webinars

More Webinars

Analytics
Standby Eligibility and Claims Solutions: Diversify Your Risk & Ensure Business Continuity
Interoperability
Nursing Leadership, Operational Innovation, and Emerging Technologies with AONL
Artificial Intelligence
Loving the AI Revolution: How Automation is Humanizing Healthcare and Improving Provider Well-Being

Video

Ilir Kullolli, Stanford Medicine Children's Health_Las Vegas skyline Photo by halbergman/E+/Getty Images
HIMSS-ACCE working together to advance digital health
Vik Bajaj, Foresite Labs_Medical research Photo by Edward Jenner/pexels.com
Healthcare research is being affected by federal budget cuts
Priyanka Jain, Evvy_Hand holding sample vial Photo courtesy of Evvy
How one women's health startup tests fertility outcomes
Keisuke Nakagawa, UC San Diego Health_Las Vegas skyline Photo by halbergman/E+/Getty Images
Can technology help bring the human touch back to medicine?

More Stories

Lee Kim, HIMSS_Las Vegas skyline Photo by halbergman/E+/Getty Images
Past year's data breaches often stemmed from remediable cybersecurity gaps
Cathy Menkiena, Health Catalyst_Las Vegas skyline Photo by halbergman/E+/Getty Images
Innovative – and useful – tech is key to empowering care teams
Sameer Sethi of Hackensack Meridian Health on AI
Hackensack Meridian Chief AI Officer on the intersection of business and technology
Doctor checking and tracking information on a computer
HHS updates regulatory guides for the safe use of EHRs
Sameer Sethi, Hackensack Meridian Health_Computer neural network concept Photo by dan/Moment/Getty Images
Chief AI Officer on becoming one and working with the C-suite
Businessperson signing piece of paper
White House releases guidance on federal AI use and procurement
Dr. Ateev Mehrotra of Brown University School of Public Health on telehealth policy
Brown University policy expert talks about the future of telehealth flexibilities
Micky Tripathi, former HHS acting chief AI officer
Former National Coordinator headed to Mayo Clinic, reports say
Home

More News

  • MobiHealthNews
  • Healthcare Finance News
  • Healthcare Payers News

Newsletter Signup

HIMSS25 European Health Conference & Exhibition
HIMSS25 European Health Conference & Exhibition
Get ready for knowledge-sharing, all the latest innovations, and in-depth demos with Europe's most influential healthcare community.
10 - 12 June, 2025 | Paris
Learn More
AI in Healthcare Forum
AI in Healthcare Forum
The HIMSS AI in Healthcare Forum cuts through the hype to showcase real-world examples illustrating the transformative potential, and realistic challenges of AI application across the care continuum.
10 - 11 July 2025 | New York
Learn More

Footer Menu

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Reprints
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy

© 2025 Healthcare IT News is a publication of HIMSS Media

X

Topics

  • Video
  • Analytics
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Cloud Computing
  • EHR
  • Government & Policy
  • Interoperability
  • Patient Engagement
  • Population Health
  • Precision Medicine
  • Privacy & Security
  • Telehealth
  • Women In Health IT

Career

  • Events
  • Jobs
  • Research Papers
  • Webinars

More

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Contact
  • Special Projects
  • Video

Regions

  • ANZ
  • ASIA
  • EMEA
  • Global Edition

The Daily Brief Newsletter

Get daily news updates from Healthcare IT News.

Search form

Top Stories

Nurse checks tablet to communicate on shift
Zoom launches agentic AI-powered mobile comms for frontline staff
HIMSSCast logo
HIMSSCast: Should every healthcare organization have an AI strategy?
Vik Bajaj, Foresite Labs_Medical research Photo by Edward Jenner/pexels.com
Healthcare research is being affected by federal budget cuts