Artificial Intelligence in Healthcare | RadNet's Dr. Suzie Bash & Dr. Gregory Sorensen
Artificial Intelligence in Healthcare: How is it being used, and why does it matter? RadNet's Chief Science Officer, Dr. GregoryΒ ...
Executive Vice President, Chief Science Officer & Director, Radnet
Search every verified A. Sorensen interview, podcast appearance, and on-the-record quote β each transcript cross-checked by AI and human review to confirm speaker identity. In a May 2025 interview, Dr. Gregory Sorensen, Chief Science Officer at RadNet, discussed the company's use of artificial intelligence in medical imaging. He stated that RadNet's AI tools are used for cancer screening, including mammography, and said the company is finding 20% more cancers with AI than without it, sometimes two years earlier. Sorensen described AI as "an expert set of eyes" that helps physicians identify subtle findings and determine when to involve a second doctor in a safeguard review process. Sorensen also addressed concerns about AI replacing physicians, saying he does not anticipate that happening. He characterized AI as a companion that works alongside doctors, distilling knowledge to help bring "the best doctor in the world to every patient." He noted that while computers are better at pattern recognition, humans are better at global reasoning, and that AI will change how doctors operate but will not replace them.
“At RADNET, the deep health AI division harnesses the power of AI to completely streamline the whole AI workflow, increasing accuracy and efficiency, empowering access to care across a diverse patient population, and enabling precision medicine which translates to improved patient care and outcomes.”
“We use AI to scan our patients 50 to 75% faster, which is especially beneficial for patients with severe anxiety reactions during MRI, and it also increases image quality, helping doctors catch tumors at earlier stages.”
“AI can detect urgent or critical findings on imaging such as brain bleeds, aneurysms, abdominal aortic aneurysms, pulmonary embolism, cervical spine fractures, and stroke, leading to much faster treatment and up to 40% improved cognitive outcomes.”
“RadNet uses AI for cancer screening not only for prostate and lung but also for breast cancers on mammography, finding 20% more cancers than without AI, sometimes two years earlier.”
Artificial Intelligence in Healthcare: How is it being used, and why does it matter? RadNet's Chief Science Officer, Dr. GregoryΒ ...
Sign in to search the full transcript archive, filter by topic, and access every quote from A. Sorensen.