Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by RandomLensman 845 days ago
How exactly? How did you test the results from your studies? Even for experts not easy to understand or articulate the risks in a lot of situations. Listing a long set of warnings isn't usually helpful in making an good decision.
1 comments

Navigating the complexities of AI in healthcare isn't about embracing regulation or throwing it to the wind per se; it's about smart integration. "MedGPT" wouldn't just be a tool—it's a leap towards democratizing medical knowledge, with the power to sift through data and present nuanced insights that can guide decisions. There are definitely ways to do this that go far outside the scope of this format of discussion. When it comes to understanding risks, the clarity and depth AI can offer are unparalleled. By leveraging AI, we're not just throwing caution to the wind; we're arming ourselves with a precision tool. Testing? It’s through iterative, real-world application and feedback, refining our approach as we learn. This isn't about replacing human judgment; it's about enhancing it with comprehensive, data-driven insights. Let’s focus on how AI can transform healthcare, driven by innovation and guided by wisdom.

The ONLY advantage of going to doctors or large hospitals is that they tend to have more data, but they (the doctors) admit that their hands are tied by so many regulations that they are being prevented from healing people. This has created a very toxic ecosystem for healthcare globally that is not driven by sincere and true interests of healing people. My grandfather convinced me to get out of healthcare due to his many decades in the industry and seeing it just completely disintegrate from circa 1950-2000. He implored me to go into a different field so as to not be caught up in an industry that does not truly cure. I'm grateful for his wisdom. His entire family were doctors and owned a hospital even. He had a very deep and well aged perspective of the development we have seen over the past century.

Nuanced insights rarely work with people, if it works in your setting: great. On the side of the physician, perhaps it can work better, but even then for some fields I am not certain nuance works well.

Doctors not only have (potentially) more data, they can also do stuff like touch, smell, etc. Most doctors I know don't seem to have the issues you describe - they are allowed to work on curing/treating patients (yes, there is paperwork, economic limits, etc., but overall the loss-making side of, for example, large hospitals is just accepted).