Google is finally absorbing a healthcare business 10 months after the move was first announced

Advertisement
Google is finally absorbing a healthcare business 10 months after the move was first announced

DeepMind Streams app

DeepMind

DeepMind's "Streams" app, which alerts clinicians to acute kidney injury.

Advertisement
  • Google has finally absorbed the healthcare arm of AI firm DeepMind, the British company it acquired in 2016 for £400 million ($500 million). The integration is happening some 10 months after Google originally announced it.
  • DeepMind Health is now officially part of Google's dedicated healthcare unit, Google Health, which is headed up by big-name healthcare CEO David Feinberg.
  • The announcement comes one month after the DeepMind cofounder who had headed up its health business, Mustafa Suleyman, confirmed he was on a leave of absence from the business for reasons that are unclear.
  • The integration brings DeepMind's controversial Streams app, a non-AI service that helps medical practitioners monitor patients with a kidney condition, under Google Health's management.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Google has finally absorbed the healthcare unit of its artificial intelligence company DeepMind, the British company it acquired for £400 million ($500 million) in 2016.

The change means that DeepMind Health, the unit which focuses on using AI to improve medical care, is now part of Google's own dedicated healthcare unit. Google Health was created in November 2018, and is run by big-name healthcare CEO David Feinberg.

Complimentary Tech Event
Transform talent with learning that works
Capability development is critical for businesses who want to push the envelope of innovation.Discover how business leaders are strategizing around building talent capabilities and empowering employee transformation.Know More

DeepMind's clinical lead, Dominic King, announced the change in a blogpost on Wednesday. King will continue to lead the team out of London.

It has taken some 10 months for the integration to happen.

Advertisement

It also comes one month after the DeepMind cofounder overseeing that division, Mustafa Suleyman, confirmed that he was on leave from the business for unspecified reasons. He has said he plans to return to DeepMind before the end of the year.

Read more: The cofounder of Google's AI company DeepMind hit back at 'speculation' over his leave of absence

Suleyman spearheaded DeepMind's "applied" division, which focuses on the practical application of artificial intelligence in areas such as healthcare and energy. DeepMind's other cofounder and CEO, Demis Hassabis, is more focused on the academic side of the business and the firm's research efforts.

One source with knowledge of the matter said Google planned to take more control of DeepMind's "applied" division, leaving Suleyman's future role at the business unclear. The shift would essentially leave DeepMind as a research-only organization, with Google focused on commercializing its findings. "They've created a private university for AI in Britain," the person said.

DeepMind hinted as much in November, when it announced the Streams app would fall under Google's auspices.

Advertisement

Mustafa Suleyman 1831_preview (1)

DeepMind

DeepMind cofounder, Mustafa Suleyman, who is on leave from the business.

DeepMind declined to comment.

The integration sees DeepMind's health partnerships with Britain's state-funded health system, the NHS, continued under Google Health, something that may raise eyebrows. A New Scientist investigation in 2016 revealed that DeepMind, with its Streams app, had extensive access to 1.6 million patients' data in an arrangement with London's Royal Free Hospital. A UK regulator ruled that the data-sharing agreement was unlawful. The revelations triggered public outcry over worries that a US tech giant, Google, might gain access to confidential patient data for profit.

DeepMind's current NHS partnerships include Moorfields Eye Hospital to detect eye disease, and University College Hospital on cancer radiotherapy treatment. In the US, it has partnered the US Department of Veterans Affairs on predicting patient deterioration. Dominic King, DeepMind's clinical lead, wrote in a post: "We see enormous potential in continuing, and scaling, our work with all three partners in the coming years as part of Google Health."

He added: "As has always been the case, our partners are in full control of all patient data and we will only use patient data to help improve care, under their oversight and instructions."

Advertisement
{{}}