Medical Xpress October 8, 2024
University of California, San Francisco

If ChatGPT were cut loose in the Emergency Department, it might suggest unneeded X-rays and antibiotics for some patients and admit others who didn’t require hospital treatment, a new study from UC San Francisco has found.

The researchers said that, while the model could be prompted in ways that make its responses more accurate, it’s still no match for the clinical judgment of a human doctor.

“This is a valuable message to clinicians not to blindly trust these models,” said postdoctoral scholar Chris Williams, MB BChir, lead author of the study, which appears Oct. 8 in Nature Communications. “ChatGPT can answer medical exam questions and help draft , but it’s not currently designed for situations that call for multiple...

Today's Sponsors

LEK
ZeOmega

Today's Sponsor

LEK

 
Topics: AI (Artificial Intelligence), Health System / Hospital, Provider, Survey / Study, Technology, Trends
Microsoft’s 10 new AI agents strengthen its enterprise automation lead
Learning the Language of Life with A.I.
How Payers are Using AI to Deny Claims and Dent Provider Revenue
4 Issues That Fall Between The Cracks Of Our AI Excitement
Generative AI Is Helping To Clear Up Brain Fog

Share This Article