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Search resuls for: "Adam Rodman"


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Those beliefs are known to have caused medical providers to rate Black patients’ pain lower, misdiagnose health concerns and recommend less relief. “I believe technology can really provide shared prosperity and I believe it can help to close the gaps we have in health care delivery,” Omiye said. In 2019, for example, academic researchers revealed that a large hospital in the United States was employing an algorithm that systematically privileged white patients over Black patients. It was later revealed the same algorithm was being used to predict the health care needs of 70 million patients nationwide. In June, another study found racial bias built into commonly used computer software to test lung function was likely leading to fewer Black patients getting care for breathing problems.
Persons: Google’s Bard, Anthropic’s Claude —, , Stanford University’s Dr, Roxana Daneshjou, ” Daneshjou, “ It's, Tofunmi Omiye, , ” Omiye, Bard, Beth Israel, Adam Rodman, Rodman, Dr, John Halamka, “ ChatGPT, MedPaLM, Mayo, ” Halamka, Halamka, Stanford, Jenna Lester, ” ___ O'Brien Organizations: FRANCISCO, Stanford School of Medicine, Digital Medicine, Associated Press, Google, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical, American Medical Association, Stanford, Nationwide, Health, Mayo Clinic, Mayo Clinic Platform's, Microsoft, University of California Locations: Boston, United States, Minnesota, Mayo, San Francisco, Providence , Rhode Island
The patient was a 39-year-old woman who had come to the emergency department at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston. On a recent steamy Friday, Dr. Megan Landon, a medical resident, posed this real case to a room full of medical students and residents. They were gathered to learn a skill that can be devilishly tricky to teach — how to think like a doctor. “Doctors are terrible at teaching other doctors how we think,” said Dr. Adam Rodman, an internist, a medical historian and an organizer of the event at Beth Israel Deaconess. But this time, they could call on an expert for help in reaching a diagnosis — GPT-4, the latest version of a chatbot released by the company OpenAI.
Persons: Megan Landon, , Adam Rodman, Beth Israel Deaconess Organizations: Beth Israel Deaconess Medical, Beth Locations: Boston
The bar is higher for diagnostic programs than it is for programs that write our notes. But the way we typically test advances in medicine — a rigorously designed randomized clinical trial that takes years — won’t work here. But even as he prepares to embrace new technology, Dr. Rodman wonders if something will be lost. writing our notes for us, Dr. Rodman sees a trade-off. At the same time, patients will be using these technologies, asking questions and coming to us with potential answers.
Persons: , Adam Rodman, Beth, Rodman, , Dr Organizations: Beth Israel Deaconess Hospital, New England, of Medicine, A.I Locations: Boston
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