logoalt Hacker News

ErrantXtoday at 6:53 AM1 replyview on HN

Doctors make errors all the time though, so the real argument is about the error percentage. If AIs is lower then it's safer (but it's hard to have that convo, I recognise).

Besides; this article was about diagnosis not prescribing. It's pretty obvious, I think, that diagnosis is one area where AI will perform extremely well in the long run.

I think there are two metrics; the first is outright misdiagnosis, which studies put between 5 and 8% in US/Europe. That's a meaningful number to tackle.

Secondly; overdiagnosis. Where a Dr says on balance it could be X on a difficult to diagnose but dangerous problem (usually cancer). The impact of overdiagnosis is significant in terms of resources, mental health, cost etc.


Replies

kubobletoday at 7:08 AM

The bar for making ai useful is much lower though. It's enough to be better than nothing.

Large populations also in the technically rich countries simply do not have access to a doctor.

in Poland which has a free public Healthcare it takes literal years to get a single appointment sometimes.

show 1 reply