
Published 24 March 2025
During Wired Health 2025 (March 18, London), healthcare professionals converged to discuss new developments involving the diagnosis and treatment of disease. From next-gen tech that streamlines symptom tracking and disease detection to AI that’s expediting medicine research, speakers shared a cautiously optimistic viewpoint on the future of health.
Disease diagnosis was a key theme across panels at Wired Health. While tech innovations are making tracking symptoms and identifying early signs of illness easier, the same tools also increase the risk of overdiagnosis (when a diagnosis is accurate, but not life threatening or altering, causing stress and anxiety for the patient). Consequently, health anxiety (the fear of becoming seriously ill) is a pressing topic when discussing health monitoring tech.
Disease diagnosis was a key theme across panels at Wired Health. While tech innovations are making tracking symptoms and identifying early signs of illness easier, the same tools also increase the risk of overdiagnosis (when a diagnosis is accurate, but not life threatening or altering, causing stress and anxiety for the patient). Consequently, health anxiety (the fear of becoming seriously ill) is a pressing topic when discussing health monitoring tech.
Medical professionals at Wired Health expressed worries about antimicrobial resistance (AMR), which could kill 39m people globally between 2025 and 2050 (Nature, 2024). But pharmaceutical researchers are speeding up the discovery of new medicines with machine learning, which could result in new antibiotics.



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