You can't Replace the doctor with a computer or a robot,
because no doctors are left in this world to replace!
All we have are, highly paid clerks filling forms and punching keyboards and technicians ramming instruments into every known and unknown orifice in human bodies.
"Starting with good data is critical for medical applications of A.I. and machine learning. The messy nature of medical data, of the E.H.R., makes the task difficult. Garbage in begets garbage out — sanitized, pretty, color-coded garbage, but garbage nonetheless. Advances in pattern recognition applied to X-rays and CT scans and retinal scans will be very helpful aids to the clinician. But as with any lab test, what A.I. will provide is at best a recommendation that a physician using clinical judgment must decide how to apply."
the earliest instance I could find was
, when Lipkin and Hardy ...... theorem for computer diagnosis of con- genital heart
starting from 1980 many claims have been made to "Replace the doctor with a computer or a robot"
the first thing was to analyse and formalize the clinician thinking process
because no doctors are left in this world to replace!
All we have are, highly paid clerks filling forms and punching keyboards and technicians ramming instruments into every known and unknown orifice in human bodies.
"Starting with good data is critical for medical applications of A.I. and machine learning. The messy nature of medical data, of the E.H.R., makes the task difficult. Garbage in begets garbage out — sanitized, pretty, color-coded garbage, but garbage nonetheless. Advances in pattern recognition applied to X-rays and CT scans and retinal scans will be very helpful aids to the clinician. But as with any lab test, what A.I. will provide is at best a recommendation that a physician using clinical judgment must decide how to apply."
the earliest instance I could find was
Computer-aided diagnosis of “dyspepsia” | SpringerLink
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/BF01070783
by JC Horrocks - 1975 - Cited by 72 - Related articles
May 15, 1975 - The cost of each new computer diagnosis was around 25 new pence ($0.60). and ... all but 1 of 23 patients with organic disease to the correct disease categoryheme: a computer aid to diagnosis of hematologic disease
https://europepmc.org/articles/pmc1807196/pdf/bullnyacadmed00151-0054.pdf
by RL Engle Jr - 1976 - Cited by 36 - Related articles
Nov 12, 1974 - Like all other parts of the human body, the brain, the organ of thought, has become ... on aids to the diagnosis of hematologic diseases was initiated in 1952
The history of diagnostic logic must be as old as that of medicine itself; the motivation to improve it has probably never been stronger than it was in the mind of the caveman patient as he felt the rasp of the trepan drilling a hole in his skull. Was the hole there to let the disease out or the cure in? Doctors have always been fascinated by diagnosis and the means by which it can be reached, but until recently the purpose of studying diagnostic logic has simply been to improve thought processes. Today this remains the primary objective, but a second motive becomes ever more important namely, that of computer modelling of the diagnostic process. The principle of parsimony
starting from 1980 many claims have been made to "Replace the doctor with a computer or a robot"
the first thing was to analyse and formalize the clinician thinking process
No comments:
Post a Comment