Doctors Use Computers More and Microscopes Less to Find Future Cancer Treatments
Not long ago, doctors hoping to cure human disease spent a lot of time in the laboratory looking through microscopes. But big data has changed all that. Now, many physician scientists spend a lot more time in front of the computer analyzing large datasets which have fundamentally changed how they find cancer treatments. We asked Dr. Rakesh Nagarajan, director of the Institute of Clinical and Translational Sciences Biomedical Informatics Program at Washington University, about how drastic this change is, what the barriers are, and when we might realize the full potential of precision medicine for cancer prevention and treatments.
Frontiers in Precision Medicine II: Cancer, Big Data and the Public
You can also listen to Dr. Rakesh Nagarajan speak about The Challenges of Big Data at Frontiers in Precision Medicine II, sponsored by the University of Utah.