Abstract
Education
and Medicine are two of the
greatest achievements of humankind
and this knowledge has been
faithfully passed down by
generations for millennia.
Each generation builds on
the knowledge of previous
generations.
High
technological advances have
also brought many advantages
to humans but because they
tend to be owned
by the very few, they have
increasingly become commercialised
and indeed weaponised.
In
a world of identity theft,
cybercrime, scams, fraud,
war and genocide, humanity
needs to be very careful about
trusting in the integrity
of AI. Particularly, Family
Medicine should always be
based on the individuality
of every patient within their
unique circumstances.
The
Covid era saw a great change
in the delivery of medicine
and particularly in remote
consultations. Telemedicine
has now become entrenched
in most countries, despite
some limitations, and has
added to the growing use of
ICT in medicine.
With
a computer on most doctors
desks globally, family doctors
are able to take advantage
of so many online facilities
and sources of information.
ICT has made the job easier
but has also added levels
of complexity and the need
for added security.
We
already have software
as the AI supporting
many diagnostic choices. This
software is a tool however,
not a decision maker and the
educated physician can access
that tool for speed of diagnosis
and recommended care. Asking
a machine to make that diagnosis
however is a totally different
matter.
Certainly
national health authorities
need to provide guidance and
oversight of the resources
doctors are using to ensure
ongoing accuracy and safety.
In the bigger picture should
we be entrusting the worlds
most valuable knowledge to
competing tech platforms when
the cyber world is already
riddled with divisions and
crime. Should not human health
always be in the hands of
humans, our well educated,
trusted doctors who have insight
into the intricacies of each
individual patients
life.
Keywords:
Artificial intelligence, family
medicine
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