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  • @janantos

    Yup, saw that. I'm glad it was helpful for you.

    And just today, I read a post here by a woman who saw an AI assistant cancel her hormone therapy via an incorrect transcription, despite her MD said and prescribed the exact opposite. She was struggling to revert that, because she had waited for her appointment for a long time and was lucky her MD resolved that emergency problem in a timely fashion.

    @RachelThornSub @EUCommission

    @katzenberger @RachelThornSub @EUCommission and thats the thing in Estonian setup, it does not make decisions, but make hints to medical staff to make decision. In Estonia AI does not make decisions. doctors do. So the case you told me, is process setup problem, not the AI. And if doctor taken this advice as granted, then we shall argue about doctors quality. I remember there has been plan in Estonia to AI have access to peoples medical records and based on its findings preemptively recommending medical examinations, that was quite interesting idea, but I think it did not went to some implementation.

  • @katzenberger @RachelThornSub @EUCommission and thats the thing in Estonian setup, it does not make decisions, but make hints to medical staff to make decision. In Estonia AI does not make decisions. doctors do. So the case you told me, is process setup problem, not the AI. And if doctor taken this advice as granted, then we shall argue about doctors quality. I remember there has been plan in Estonia to AI have access to peoples medical records and based on its findings preemptively recommending medical examinations, that was quite interesting idea, but I think it did not went to some implementation.

    @janantos

    Well, in that case, the doctor made the exact opposite prescription, but the transcription was altered by the transcribing assistant.

    If there are experienced reviewers (not just in medicine) who can invest considerable time and focus into cross-checking outputs, the worst can be prevented. But the effort that goes into such reviews was the cost factor that they wanted to eliminate, in the first place.

    Its nothing short of amazing that in a domain where even the tiniest of devices is regulated to death, to prevent harm, an try-and-error approach is followed with respect to the introduction of "AI".

    Safeguarding this via higher demands on already stressed MDs, and holding them accountable for catching all errors they didn't even make themselves, is not sustainable, IMHO. For me, that's way too risky.

    @RachelThornSub @EUCommission

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