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by fumeux_fume
367 days ago
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I seriously question the premise that productivity gains from the use of AI (if they really exist) will translate into quality of life improvements. If 20 years of work experience has taught me anything, it's that higher productivity typically results in more busy work. More busy work or more work that gives the employer the most value rather than the customer or employee. So the doctor in your example gets more patients rather than higher quality interactions. Some people will get to see a doctor sooner but they still get low quality interactions. |
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Or: The AI tooling will be able to allow the lay-person to double-check the doctor's work, find their blind spots, and take their health into their own hands.
Example: I've been struggling with chronic sinus infections for ~5 years. 6 weeks ago I took all the notes about my doctor interactions and fed them into ChatGPT to do deep research on. In particular it was able to answer a particularly confusing component: my ENT said he visually saw indications of allergic reaction in my sinuses, but my allergy tests were negative. ChatGPT found an NIH study with results that 25% of patients had localized allergic reactions that did not show up on allergy tests elsewhere on their body (the skin of my shoulder in my case). My ENT said flat out that isn't how allergies work and wanted to start me on a CPAP to condition the air while I was sleeping, and a nebulizer treatment every few months. I decided to run an experiment and I started taking an allergy pill before bed, while waiting for the CPAP+nebulizer. So far, I haven't had even a twinge of sinus problems.