The revolution of personalized psychiatry: Will technology make it happen sooner?

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Abstract

Personalized medicine (PM) aims to establish a new approach in clinical decision-making, based upon a patient's individual profile in order to tailor treatment to each patient's characteristics. Although this has become a focus of the discussion also in the psychiatric field, with evidence of its high potential coming from several proof-of-concept studies, nearly no tools have been developed by now that are ready to be applied in clinical practice. In this paper, we discuss recent technological advances that can make a shift toward a clinical application of the PM paradigm. We focus specifically on those technologies that allow both the collection of massive as much as real-time data, i.e., electronic medical records and smart wearable devices, and to achieve relevant predictions using these data, i.e. the application of machine learning techniques.

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Perna, G., Grassi, M., Caldirola, D., & Nemeroff, C. B. (2018, April 1). The revolution of personalized psychiatry: Will technology make it happen sooner? Psychological Medicine. Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0033291717002859

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