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Home » AI In Healthcare, AI vs Doctor: Who can treat patients better? Know who won in the competition between doctors and AI? – ai perform better than doctors in emergency room icu new harvard study reveal – Ai news News
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AI In Healthcare, AI vs Doctor: Who can treat patients better? Know who won in the competition between doctors and AI? – ai perform better than doctors in emergency room icu new harvard study reveal – Ai news News

By staffMay 4, 20264 Mins Read
AI In Healthcare, AI vs Doctor: Who can treat patients better? Know who won in the competition between doctors and AI? – ai perform better than doctors in emergency room icu new harvard study reveal – Ai news News
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AI in Medical: Recently a research has come to light. In this, AI performed better than some doctors in diagnosing patients’ diseases and planning their treatment. Even in emergency rooms, AI saw many cases and in most cases performed better than doctors.

AI is now playing its role not only in telling recipes and making photos, but also in treating patients. A new Harvard study released recently has shown that advanced AI models can perform better than doctors in identifying patients’ diseases. Even in the emergency room (ER). The researchers said that OpenAI’s advanced o1 language model was put into direct competition with hundreds of doctors in many different diagnostic situations and found that the AI ​​​​consistently outperformed doctors in both identifying the disease and planning its treatment.

AI is working better than doctors

In a new research published in the journal ‘Science’, it was told that 76 clinical cases from the emergency room of Israel Deaconness Medical Center were given to OpenAI’s o1 model and two expert doctors. Researchers found that o1 performed equally or much better than human experts in a variety of tasks. When the least information was available, o1 identified the disease at or very close to correct in 67.1% of cases. Whereas the accuracy of both the doctors was 55.3% and 50%.

As the doctor got more information about the patient. The model’s accuracy increased to 72.4%, while the two doctors’ accuracy was 61.8% and 52.6%. The accuracy of o1 reached 81.6% when patients were admitted to the medical floor or ICU. This time too it left both the doctors behind.

The work can be risky

The study also found that when AI was asked to plan treatment such as prescribing antibiotics or making end-of-life decisions, it was ahead of doctors. Across five case studies, AI achieved an average score of 89%, which was significantly higher than doctors’ scores. Doctors scored about 34% using traditional methods and 41% using GPT-4.

The researchers said that using AI to help make clinical decisions is sometimes considered a high-risk task, but greater use of these tools could help reduce diagnostic errors, delays and lack of access to treatment.

There is a need for such research

However, the researchers also warned that clinical medicine is full of textual input. Such as the level of physical discomfort of patients or information about medical imaging. He suggests that this means that in the future there is a need for researchers who can assess how humans and machines can work together effectively.

Mona Dixit

About the authorMona DixitMona Dixit is an experienced journalist in the world of technology and gadgets. She is currently associated with Times Online as the Principal Digital Content Producer. Active in the field of journalism for the last 9 years, Mona has closely observed and covered the changing landscape of technology and consumer electronics. As a tech journalist, Mona specializes in reviews of new gadgets, launch events and changes happening in the world of AI. She not only keeps a keen eye on the latest smartphones, but also deeply examines audio devices and wearables. Mona also has a strong understanding of consumer electronics, AI innovation and the smartphone market. He is an expert in converting complex things of technology into simple life-hacks (Tips & Tricks) and accurately analyzing future technology. Mona believes that the real measure of technology is not just its ‘specifications’ but ‘user experience’. His real skill is to translate complex technical terminology into simple and colloquial language, so that even a common reader can take full advantage of the technology. For them the ultimate purpose of technology is to make life simpler and better. Mona’s real skill is to convey difficult technical information to the readers in easy and colloquial language. He believes that the real purpose of technology is to make life simpler. After Bachelor of Science, Mona has done post graduation in Journalism and Mass Communication from IMS Noida, Meerut University. Before joining Times Online, she had worked with leading technology websites – Techlusive and Newsbytes.… read more