Study published in Clinical medicine Titled Artificial Intelligence (AI) In medicine: ethical and moral aspects and their impact on the relationship between doctor and patient, Co-authored by Montse Esquerda, Director of the Borja Institute of Bioethics-URL and Chair of the Ethics Committee of the Council of Medical Faculties of Catalonia, he said: “In the near future, it is plausible that this part of the functions performed by doctors They are supplemented or even replaced By artificial intelligence, which requires redirecting the profession towards areas where it can provide distinct value. While integrating algorithms aimed at facilitating decision-making is a critical step, determining exactly where and how to apply them is equally important.
He adds: “The solution lies in ensuring that these technological developments contribute to achieving this A medicine that is not only personal, but also personalwith closer and more humane care, medicine High technology, high touch. The successful intersection of technology and medical practice will involve careful consideration of how these advances can improve the quality of care provided to patients, while always keeping the fundamental human relationship in health at the center of attention.
We must emphasize “not just personalized medicine, but personalized medicine” because it indicates that advanced technology will allow health professions Focus on care. Hippocratic medicine (Hippocrates, Cos. 460 BC – Thessaly 370 BC, considered the father of medicine) is based, among other things, on this basis: “Heals sometimes, cures often, and always comforts.” Or in other words: “A good doctor cures disease; The great doctor treats the patient suffering from the disease(William Osler, Ontario, Canada, 1849 – Oxford, England, 1919; physician and one of the founding professors of Johns Hopkins Hospital.)
And not two without three:Not everything is a cure. Not everything is fine. Not everything is technology and procedures. “What is important is the patient, not the disease,” as Albert Jovel (Barcelona 1962-2013, doctor specializing in preventive medicine and public health, doctor of public health, sociology and patient) once said, known, among other things, for defending the transition from built-in medicine. Evidence-based effectiveness-based medicine.
Artificial intelligence, which is powerfully entering medicine and biomedical sciences, will contribute to improving health outcomes and the quality and safety of care and will facilitate the rapid access of more effective and efficient treatments into clinical practice, but it will not replace it, because it cannot, for the doctor and other health professionals in the essential work: care. . “I can understand that they are not treating me, however I couldn’t understand that they didn’t take care of me“, which is what Jovel also said.
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