chief medical information officer
New AI tools can help doctors take notes, message patients, but they still make mistakes
Fox News White House correspondent Jacqui Heinrich has the latest on concerns over the president's mental and physical fitness on'Special Report.' Don't be surprised if your doctors start writing you overly friendly messages. They could be getting some help from artificial intelligence. New AI tools are helping doctors communicate with their patients, some by answering messages and others by taking notes during exams. Already thousands of doctors are using similar products based on large language models.
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Achieving Real-World Success with AI
"If we told clinicians, 'we will use advanced math to help you improve care,' they would probably be fine with it. But the term'artificial intelligence' raises natural skepticism about what it really means." "First, do no harm" is a promise many of us make when becoming clinicians. To me it means that, for as long as I practice medicine, I must carefully weigh the risks and benefits of my decisions for patients. This principle underpins a healthy skepticism from some clinicians when learning about new approaches and technologies, such as artificial intelligence (AI), that claim to improve patient care.
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