Remember, the AI doesn’t create anything, so you add risk potentially to the patient outcome and perhaps make advancement more difficult.
My late wife had to have a stent placed in a vein in her brain to relieve cranial pressure. We had to travel to to New York for an interventional radiologist and team to fish a 7 inch stent and balloon from her thigh up.
At the time, we had to travel to NYC, and the doctor was one of a half dozen who could do the procedure in the US. Who’s going to train the future physician the skills needed to develop the procedure?
For stuff like this, I feel like AI is potentially going to erase certain human knowledge.
> Who’s going to train the future physician the skills needed to develop the procedure?
i would presume that AI taking over won't erase the physical work, which would mean existing training regimes will continue to exist.
Until one day, an AI robot is capable of performing such a procedure, which would then mean the human job becomes obsolete. Like a horse-drawn coach driver - that "job" is gone today, but nobody misses it.
Performing the procedure requires a high level of skill in interpreting scans (angiograms) in real time.
Yeah there’s no more drivers out there, bro. Lol.