| > Any sound reason The job of a GP is actually probably one of the top hardest to automate, because the GP's main (and often only) job is to extract information. And that _does not_ consist in performing plenty of tests, but in speaking to and most importantly listening to the patient. > You don't need a ton of training to get the above from a patient and into a computer, and to ship the samples. Great! And you know what good that would do to improve diagnostic accuracy? Zilch. Zero. There's a saying that '90% of diagnoses are done on history'. Now tell me why that would be different for an algorithm given identical information? If there was a simple answer to that, we'd already be running statistical models over patient labs all day long, which we're not. > are you either a) a defeatist, or b) a GP? I'm an epidemiologist and also a practicing anesthesiologist, which is why the statistical theories of people who have never set foot in the clinics to see what's the job really about make me want to jump off a bridge. |
- Doctor says "Say ahhh" and looks in my throat with the thingy
- Doctor looks in my ear canals with another thingy
- On other occasions, my other vitals are taken, maybe some vials of blood, etc. Again, a student can do this.
I'm asked a few general questions, with some follow-up questions based on my answers.
Then the doctor puts this information - along with my patient history - into the decision tree in their head and comes up with a result. If the doctor is stumped, I'm sent to a specialist.
The above can be automated, plain and simple. It would also be an improvement over my experience of the health system - in Canada. I have never seen my GP pull up a multi-year graph of my blood pressure, weight, or whatever. What I am describing is a system for creating regular data points of the kind currently used in diagnosis. What I fail to understand is how you cannot see that there must necessarily be predictive value in such a database.
Even if only 80% of the job can be automated, public health would improve immensely if the global population can do regular checkups like the above cheaply.