From the Googleplex comes a free AI tool for skin diagnostics

Google Health is launching a free app that uses AI trained on more than 16,000 clinical dermatology cases and can identify hundreds of skin conditions, including cancers, with accuracy comparable to that of board-certified dermatologists in the U.S.

Several outlets broke the story Tuesday, including the Financial Times of London, which notes the tool’s ease of use for consumers as well as its accessibility to anyone on the Internet.

“The launch follows three years of development at Google, which has long viewed healthcare as a market ripe for disruption by advanced artificial intelligence,” FT points out. “It comes as rivals Apple, Amazon and Microsoft are also pushing into the potentially lucrative space, building healthcare services for consumers, physicians and pharmaceutical companies.”

The article quotes the cardiologist, author and AI aficionado Eric Topol, MD.

“This was bound to happen at some point,” says Topol, “as it was the first major deep-learning AI use case in medicine with some validation in 2017.”

Google has named the app Derm Assist and is planning its official release for later this year in Europe, where it’s already been cleared by the EU.

Approval by the FDA for a U.S. release is pending.

Get the rest from FT, CNET or the BBC. (Google’s promotional page here.)

Dave Pearson

Dave P. has worked in journalism, marketing and public relations for more than 30 years, frequently concentrating on hospitals, healthcare technology and Catholic communications. He has also specialized in fundraising communications, ghostwriting for CEOs of local, national and global charities, nonprofits and foundations.

Around the web

A string of executive orders from the White House created serious concerns among radiologists and other healthcare providers throughout the United States. The American College of Radiology issued a statement to help guide its members through the chaos. 

Bridgefield Capital, founded in 2015, has previously invested in such popular brands as Cirque Du Soleil, Del Monte and Quiksilver. This transaction is expected to be completed in the second half of 2025. 

Given the precarious excitement of the moment—or is it exciting precarity?—policymakers and healthcare leaders must set directives guiding not only what to do with AI but also when to do it.