The Role of Doctors Is Changing Forever

The New Yorker 

Others say they don't need us. It's time for us to think of ourselves not as the high priests of health care but as what we have always been: healers. Not long ago, I cared for a middle-aged man I'll call Jim, who was generally healthy but had recently started to feel sluggish. One of his friends told him to try a hormone supplement. After Jim saw on social media that Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., the Trump Administration's Secretary of Health and Human Services, had endorsed supplements as a part of an "anti-aging" regimen, he ordered one from a telehealth company. A few months later, he noticed swelling and pain in his calf. ChatGPT warned him that he might have a blood clot.