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"ChatGPT said I have hemorrhoids. Operate": Can you trust AI diagnoses
LIGA.net asked doctors about how their patients use AI and whether it is appropriate to do so
Probably, each of us has googled our symptoms at least once and strongly regretted it. After all, often even a common cough or runny nose was a "precursor" of, if not Ebola, then definitely cancer.
Time goes by, and artificial intelligence has replaced Google, which can not only tell you what's wrong with you, but also "decode" your test results and even prescribe treatment.
But can we really stop "terrorizing" our family doctor on Viber now, and solve all issues in a second through ChatGPT?
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LIGA.net I spoke with doctors to find out what interesting cases they had encountered in their practice, and what they themselves think about the use of AI by patients:
- Proctologist Anastasia Prystaya – on what happened to the patient's hemorrhoids who dreamed of surgery from ChatGPT;
- Dermatologist and oncologist Svitlana Dyachuk – about 2 clinical cases with different outcomes;
- Pulmonologist Oleksandr Ivashchenko – on how a chatbot referred him to a doctor
- Endocrinologist Natalia Lyashenko – how ChatGPT "misled" about selenium
- Endocrinologist Anastasia Sokolova – how AI became a "judge"
- Cardiologist Vera Gorbacheva – on the "black box" and life hacks for using chat.
- Psychologist Solomiya Kozub on how ChatGPT can be useful.
- Psychologist Maryna Didenko on why AI is similar to vitamins.
- We'll tell you who won in the ChatGPT vs. doctors study.
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