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by square_usual
1780 days ago
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The issue with doctors is a lot about supply and demand. Based on your jurisdiction, becoming a doctor requires a lot of time and approval from a governing body, which forms a bottleneck on supply. For example, in the US, the limiting factor is the number of available residency slots. That's a legal and political problem, and you cannot solve that with tech. Of course, nobody says your technical solution has to be about increasing the number of doctors - access to healthcare can be improved by, say, helping doctors examine or treat more patients than before by automating the mundane stuff, or even some sort of miracle tech that can take care of the most common illnesses without any doctor's intervention (I'm skeptical that this would be possible without AGI). It's definitely not the kind of thing you can fix in a solo team part time, though. |
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It may increase overall life quality and reduce number of appeals to GP
Another idea was, that often when I slightly sick, it's unclear whether I need some medical help or just some advice is fine, or may be I can just lay in the bed for a day or two. It may reduce number of irrelevant calls to GP
To your point about supply, is it fine to have telemedicine calls with doctors from other countries? Not sure about prescriptions though.. also it may make medical help less available in countries with lower salaries than in US for example What's your thoughts?