Mount Sinai has become a laboratory for AI, trying to shape the future of medicine. But some healthcare workers fear the technology comes at a cost.

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  • FaceDeer@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    “If we believe that in our most vulnerable moments … we want somebody who pays attention to us,” Michelle Mahon, the assistant director of nursing practice at the National Nurses United union, said, “then we need to be very careful in this moment.”

    Ironically, I recall there was a study done just recently wherein a modern AI chatbot was compared with human doctors when giving medical advice online and the patients much preferred the bedside manner of the AI chatbot. Human doctors and nurses can get tired, bored, annoyed, and just generally may not have the ideal personality for interacting with patients. An AI can be programmed to be always polite, attentive, positive, and so forth, and it will do so. I could easily imagine a situation just a few years from now when I would be reassured by having an AI “attendant” when I’m in a hospital for something.

    “There is something that technology can never do, and that is be human,” she said.

    Indeed. And that may actually be a strength sometimes.

    • gelberhut@lemdro.id
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      1 year ago

      I read about test which was do e on Reddit subreddit where chatGPT answers were compared with human doctor’s answers (who answer people on Reddit, probably not that representative selection of human doctor’s, though).

      The results were assessed by other human dictors, not just patients.

      The test found that answers provided by chatGPT had better quality and had higher emphathy.