ORL 2025
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    • Mon 6 Oct
    • Tue 7 Oct
    • Wed 8 Oct
    • Thu 9 Oct
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Associate Professor Narinder Singh

MBBS (Syd) MS (Syd) FRACS (OHNS)
ENT Specialist Surgeon, Rhinologist, Westmead Hospital; Clinical Associate Professor, University of Sydney, Australia
Narinder Singh is a Rhinologist/ Anterior Skull Base Surgeon, Head of Department at Westmead Hospital, Australia’s largest healthcare campus and Clinical Associate Professor at the University of Sydney.

He has published over 80 peer-reviewed publications, university textbooks and book chapters and has given over 230 guest and keynote presentations at international scientific meetings. He has supervised 12 PhD and Masters students to completion with another 5 currently in progress. His team has received major grants from the Australian Research Council, the Passe and Williams Memorial Foundation, The Ramsay Hospital Research Foundation and Microsoft as well as major research funding from ResMed, Optinose and GSK.

A/Prof Singh has 2 key research themes: 

1) Artificial Intelligence (AI). He founded the Society for AI in Medicine, Surgery and Healthcare (www.amsah.org), convening the first Australian congress in Sydney, 2019, with a recent meeting in Brisbane, 2023. His flagship project, DrumBeat.ai, aims to address ear disease in rural and remote Indigenous Australian children (www.drumbeat.ai). 

2) Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD). He founded the Society for CFD of the Nose and Airway (www.scona.org), convening the first world congress in London, 2018, with subsequent meetings in Chicago, Oklahoma and Brisbane.
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DrumBeat.ai: Using Artificial Intelligence (AI) to Address Ear Disease in Rural and Remote Indigenous Australian Children

Background
In Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children living in rural and remote Australia, chronic ear disease can have lifelong impacts on hearing, education, social issues and employment. Access to otolaryngologists is limited in such areas. Telehealth has proven helpful but has several limitations. The aim of this project was to use AI to classify ear disease and predict the likelihood of hearing loss in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children.
  
Methods  
Otoscopic images and audiometric data were were collected by remote nurses and audiologists from Queensland and the Northern Territory from 2010 to 2020. Deep learning methods were used to develop models to a) classify ear disease and b) predict the likelihood of hearing loss using otoscopic images alone. Performance was evaluated by accuracy and agreement (prevalence-and-bias adjusted κ values).
  
Results  
9086 otoscopic images were used to train an AI model to identify normal, acute otitis media, otitis media with effusion, or chronic otitis media, achieving 90% accuracy and near perfect agreement (κ = 0.86). To identify the presence of hearing loss, 4436 otoscopic images with corresponding audiometry results were used, achieving 88% accuracy and substantial agreement (κ = 0.76).
 
Conclusion 
AI models can identify ear disease and predict the likelihood of hearing loss in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children using otoscopic images alone. We are currently undertaking on-site field tests of these AI models at remote sites in Qld, the NT and WA. 
 
For any queries please contact our Professional Conference Organiser (PCO):
Workz4U Conference Management Ltd
Po Box 90641, Victoria Street West, Auckland 1142, NZ
+64 21 325 133 ~ [email protected] ~ www.w4u.co.nz
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ORL 2025 is the 78th Annual Scientific Meeting of the 
​The New Zealand Society of Otolaryngology,
Head & Neck Surgery

www.orl.org.nz
​

  • Welcome
  • Call for Abstracts
  • Speakers
    • Our Speakers
    • Information for Speakers
  • Programme
    • Mon 6 Oct
    • Tue 7 Oct
    • Wed 8 Oct
    • Thu 9 Oct
    • Social Programme
  • Registration
  • Sponsorship & Exhibition
    • Opportunities
    • Our Supporters
    • Information for Exhibitors
  • General Information
    • Venue
    • Accommodation
    • Helpful Info
    • Destination Hawke's Bay
    • Destination NZ
    • Our Environment
    • Health & Safety
  • Contact