Dr Eric Topol discusses the present and future of AI in medicine with historian and futurist Dr Adam Rodman.
Please confirm that you would like to log out of Medscape. If you log out, you will be required to enter your username and password the next time you visit.podcast. We have a new episode today with a really interesting fellow physician, Dr Adam Rodman. He's an internist at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center. He's an educator and instructor at Harvard Medical School, author of the bookYou've been really lighting up lately.
Then in post–Revolutionary War France, a movement took place among doctors who began to experiment with what we would now call diagnostic tests. The first was percussion, to see where fluid was accumulating — percussion of the body cavities. Then you have René Laënnec, a musician who used a lathe to make a wooden cylinder, inventing the first stethoscope.
I don't want this. It's going to interfere with my patient visit and bonding. I don't want to learn any soundsWe are seeing that again. Many physicians are skeptical and worried about AI. Can you address that? Is there a parallel with the stethoscope and these other changes that are occurring?You're right. I did a research study on the death exam, and in the 1890s in the UK, people were still pooh-poohing the stethoscope, four generations of doctors later.
This is an active area of debate. I'm just going to acknowledge that the community is split on this. Some people say doctors need to become more proficient with data science; we need to understand how data science works so that we can have two-way communication with data scientists to make things better. I'm not sure about that because if you look at the EHR, that's not a core competency of being a doctor. My general approach has been to think of LLMs as technological tools.
Österreich Neuesten Nachrichten, Österreich Schlagzeilen
Similar News:Sie können auch ähnliche Nachrichten wie diese lesen, die wir aus anderen Nachrichtenquellen gesammelt haben.
Utah Jazz Scholarship program continues to make a difference, shape the future for underrepresented studentsKeilani Ngatuvai is a sophomore at Southern Utah University, determined to succeed after receiving a four-year scholarship from the Utah Jazz.“I want to prove t
Weiterlesen »
National Latino Physicians Day: A group of residents raising awareness about the lack of Hispanic doctorsOct. 1 marks the second annual National Latino Physician's Day. A group of IU School of Medicine Residents are raising awareness about the lack of Latino representation in their field.
Weiterlesen »
Gulf Coast’s Providence Hospital, clinics acquired by USA HealthAn estimated 1,800 Providence associates, physicians and other providers are now part of USA Health
Weiterlesen »
Shape Of Brew: Ed Sheeran Gets Drunk While Celebrating Album Release In New York CityThe 'Eyes Closed' singer bought rounds of shots and played beer pong with fans during a six-hour bar crawl in the Big Apple.
Weiterlesen »
How China-West tensions will shape global marketsTensions between the West and China are rising, from tit-for-tat trade tariffs to tech rivalry and spying allegations.
Weiterlesen »