Google AI helping India boost maternal health
Google AI helping India boost maternal health
Researchers from Google Research and
IIT Madras have designed an AI technology that could provide an indication of
women who are at risk of dropping out from the health information programme.
The technology has
helped non-profit organisation ARMMAN to personalise interventions and retain
women in the health programmes, improving maternal health outcomes.
Test
results demonstrated that use of AI technology was able to bring down the risk
of drop-offs by up to 32 per cent for women at high risk of dropping out,
Google has announced.
ARMMAN runs mMitra, a
free mobile voice call service that sends timely and targeted preventive care
information to expectant and new mothers.
"Adherence to
such public health programs is a big challenge but timely intervention to
retain people is beneficial to improve maternal health outcomes," Google
said.
The team is currently
working towards scaling this to more than 300,000 women in mMitra.
"We are excited to
continue to support ARMMAN as the project team increases the reach of this
technology to over one million mothers and children in 2021," the tech
giant said in a statement on Saturday.
To support ARMMAN's
growing efforts, Google.org has committed another $530,000 to scale the use of
AI for social good to reach underserved women and children.
Google AI is
helping Indian nonprofits and universities solve big challenges in the field of
public health, conservation, agriculture and education.
The company
announced Google Research India, an AI Lab in Bengaluru, in 2019.
In 2020, Google announced AI for Social Good would support six
projects from NGOs and academic collaborations to utilise the application of AI
to assist underserved communities that have not traditionally benefited from
the prowess of AI.
With
technical and scientific contributions from Google Research and Singapore
Management University, Wildlife Conservation Trust designed AI models that help
predict human-wildlife conflict in Bramhapuri forest division in Tadoba,
Maharashtra.
These
novel AI techniques provide over 80 per cent accuracy in predicting
human-wildlife conflict in the Bramhapuri forest division in the test results.
This
work is currently being field-tested in Chandrapur district, Madhya Pradesh, to
ensure safe deployment, Google said.
In yet another
example of AI, Google said that creation tools in low-resource languages suffer
from very low accuracy, adding barriers to content creation.
The team at
AI4Bharat and IIT Madras, with support from Google, has developed
state-of-the-art Natural Language Understanding tools to develop open-language
models for two low-resource languages (Konkani, Maithal), making story-reading
easier for more than 70,000 children.
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