Doctors Perform Better Than Internet Or App-Based Symptoms Checkers, Says Study (sciencedaily.com) 192
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Science Daily: Increasingly powerful computers using ever-more sophisticated programs are challenging human supremacy in areas as diverse as playing chess and making emotionally compelling music. But can digital diagnosticians match, or even outperform, human physicians? The answer, according to a new study led by researchers at Harvard Medical School, is "not quite." The findings, published Oct. 10 in JAMA Internal Medicine, show that physicians' performance is vastly superior and that doctors make a correct diagnosis more than twice as often as 23 commonly used symptom-checker apps. The analysis is believed to provide the first direct comparison between human-made and computer-based diagnoses. Diagnostic errors stem from failure to recognize a disease or to do so in a timely manner. Physicians make such errors roughly 10 to 15 percent of the time, researchers say. In the study, 234 internal medicine physicians were asked to evaluate 45 clinical cases, involving both common and uncommon conditions with varying degrees of severity. For each scenario, physicians had to identify the most likely diagnosis along with two additional possible diagnoses. Each clinical vignette was solved by at least 20 physicians. The physicians outperformed the symptom-checker apps, listing the correct diagnosis first 72 percent of the time, compared with 34 percent of the time for the digital platforms. Eighty-four percent of clinicians listed the correct diagnosis in the top three possibilities, compared with 51 percent for the digital symptom-checkers. The difference between physician and computer performance was most dramatic in more severe and less common conditions. It was smaller for less acute and more common illnesses.
This doesn't prove what they were hoping to prove (Score:5, Interesting)
"Eighty-four percent of clinicians listed the correct diagnosis in the top three possibilities, compared with 51 percent for the digital symptom-checkers. The difference between physician and computer performance was most dramatic in more severe and less common conditions. It was smaller for less acute and more common illnesses."
I'm surprised that digital diagnosis is that good already. The era of an "iDoc" app being as good as a gateway practitioner is probably not far off.
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Re:This doesn't prove what they were hoping to pro (Score:5, Interesting)
What is harder is management - finding the right collection of drugs that will effectively treat a patient's diseases without introducing too many side effects. And what's even harder is anything procedural - we have no computers that can actually do procedures at all. Those aren't what most people think of as "going to the doctor", but it's what most doctors do - either manage disease, or do procedures, both of which are either mostly or severely beyond the ken of computers. Show me a computer that can do something as simple as put in an IV, and I'll be greatly impressed. So many subtleties boil down to "well, I saw something once that looked just like this, and the solution was X..." that it's worth trying X before going on to Y and Z.
My wife is a diagnostician - a neurologist. She sees stuff on a daily basis that would flummox any non-neurologist (really, I barely know what she's talking about half the time, and my peers would be much, much worse at that), let alone a computer. As the old joke goes, it's like being a car mechanic - who has to work on the car while it's doing 70 miles per hour down the highway, with zero downtime acceptable.
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I'm a doctor, though not a diagnostician. Diagnosis is rarely hard - there are some hard cases, but they really mostly aren't. Do you have a persistently elevated blood glucose level? You have diabetes. Do you have consistently high blood pressure? You have hypertension
You do realise that diabetes and hypertension are not real diagnoses?
Diabetes does not describe the types of diabetes a person. Type I, Type II, other rarer types. All diabetes means is that you have elevated blood glucose levels.
Ditto for hypertension.
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That's because it is really lupus, but he didn't want to scare you.
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other rarer types
I'm always up for some continuing medical education. Type I is lack of insulin. Type II is insulin resistance. What are the other, rarer types?
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
Re:This doesn't prove what they were hoping to pro (Score:4, Insightful)
Do you have consistently high blood pressure? You have hypertension.
That's not really a diagnosis. That's just a different name for the symptoms. Bonus points for diagnosing "Pirmary Hypertension" which of course means "yeah dunno".
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I mean, there are lots of genetic mutations with "variable penetrance". Why do some people get just a touch, and others get slapped down hard? Could be auxiliary genes, could be genetic mosaicism, could
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A very specific diagnosis is, after all, just another name for a list of the symptoms; you're just complaining that the list isn't precise enough.
Not really. I was complaining about your *specific* choice. High blood pressure and hypertension mean the same. All you've done is given the symptom a different name.
Compare to, you go in with a persistent, nasty sore throat and the doctor tells you have strep throat. There are many underlying causes of sore throats, such rhinovirii [*], smoke, excessive voice use
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I'm a doctor, though not a diagnostician. Diagnosis is rarely hard - there are some hard cases, but they really mostly aren't. Do you have a persistently elevated blood glucose level? You have diabetes. Do you have consistently high blood pressure? You have hypertension. Etc. It's hardly surprising that computers are just as good as humans at diagnosing diseases that are mostly defined by strict, objective criteria.
Excellant point. My lay viewpoint on what most doctors do is not diagnose, but treat symptoms, especially at the primary care level. Someone comes in displaying X, the thought process is X is treated most commonly by doing Y and hence we will try Y. If the symptoms disappear than the patients is cured and all is well. The doctor may also offer a diagnosis, often because the patient expects it, but finding the cause is less important than deciding what will make the symptoms go away. To extend your car an
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The other problem is that some patients will lie about their symptoms -either exaggerating or denying. Doctors know this and have the problem of seeing through what the patient says without pissing the patient off so that the patient would then refuse to cooperate or comply.
It will be interesting to see how an AI will deal with that aspect of medical care. And yes, I'm aware that there are tests, but you can't run every test just because.
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I usually have the opposite problem. I can't identify or understand my symptoms, and often tell the doctors I need to find counseling and dig around a bit; they try to diagnose me anyway. That's why I have a diagnosis for anhedonia as a symptom of ADHD (as opposed to depression), which is correct; but I also have no idea how to measure treatment, which is bad. The drugs I'm on (amphetamine) have made me more-responsive, more outgoing, more engaged, and generally identifiable as a happier and more-emotio
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Your IV example is not a good example, that is actually something people are working on, here some quick list of some links:
https://www.sciencedaily.com/r... [sciencedaily.com]
https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
https://web.stanford.edu/group... [stanford.edu]
http://www.yissum.co.il/techno... [yissum.co.il]
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What is harder is management - finding the right collection of drugs that will effectively treat a patient's diseases without introducing too many side effects. And what's even harder is anything procedural - we have no computers that can actually do procedures at all. Those aren't what most people think of as "going to the doctor", but it's what most doctors do - either manage disease, or do procedures, both of which are either mostly or severely beyond the ken of computers. Show me a computer that can do something as simple as put in an IV, and I'll be greatly impressed. So many subtleties boil down to "well, I saw something once that looked just like this, and the solution was X..." that it's worth trying X before going on to Y and Z.
The short answer is that a nurse with an expert system can do a better job of all that than a doctor without one... if the system is trained by competent doctors and statisticians.
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In theory, you're totally right. In practice, the nurses don't know what questions to ask, or how to
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If you had a computer that was as good at interrogation as a doctor, we wouldn't have TSA agents.
The TSA has never caught a terrorist and middle-aged crazy women manage to get through security and get on planes. The TSA is a jobs and harassment program, it is not about security.
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Way to miss the point.
Uh no. See, you spewed some crazy in the middle of your comment there, and I corrected it. If you want me to believe you're working on logic, you're going to have to pick an example that isn't literally insane.
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If this follows the same trend as we saw in computer vision in the last few years, then doctors will be outperformed by machines in less than a decade in all the simpler tasks. The thing is, we truly are only in the beginning of the era of machine learning, and currently, there is no upper bound to what it can possibly do.
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Of course there is. Machine learning can't change the laws of physics, for example, so we can use that as a starting point, and then use linear regression and K-means clustering to.. oh god damnit.
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These were internet diagnosis apps, designed essentially as novelties to get ad revenue.
Both Google and IBM are designing diagnostic systems for real. It will be interesting to see how they do.
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"Eighty-four percent of clinicians listed the correct diagnosis in the top three possibilities, compared with 51 percent for the digital symptom-checkers. The difference between physician and computer performance was most dramatic in more severe and less common conditions. It was smaller for less acute and more common illnesses."
I'm surprised that digital diagnosis is that good already. The era of an "iDoc" app being as good as a gateway practitioner is probably not far off.
I was surprised that the doctor difference was smaller for common illnesses. I would have guessed the opposite. I would have expected a properly written AI to be much better at identifying obscure illnesses than a doctor that has never seen that particular illness. Also, they are using off the shelf symptom checker apps. Some of them might be ok but many are likely crap. If they are already at 51% then if someone like google seriously tried to tackle it with a decent budget then likely they could do mu
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You find it surprising that a system based on statistical analysis has trouble identifying things that are statistically unlikely? It is likely to assume everything is going to be that which is statistically the most likely. Common illnesses are the most statistically likely, thus AIs are going to perform best at those.
I'm reminded of my machine learning class. If you write a machine learning tool that when asked if you have cancer always says no, you'll have an incredibly high accuracy.
That's the wrong kind of statistics to use for diagnosis. It's not how many other people have those particular symptoms. It is how closely those particular symptoms match a known illness. Now you could always have a disclaimer that the best match is rare and therefore unlikely but it should still be included as the best match. There should also be a question that differentiates between the "common" illness and the "unique" illness even if that question is just something like "have you been to africa rec
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It actually sounds like people to me.
You know maybe you're retarded, or have aspergers. You should get some ritalin. I can tell because you disagree with me and a lot of aspies disagree with me. /inarguable Fark diagnosis
Seriously, though, people who have nfc about medicine (or any field) will recognize a set of familiar things and tie it to their experience. Their experience is going to be the most common thing anyone encounters, so they'll identify what looks vaguely like that as that.
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"Eighty-four percent of clinicians listed the correct diagnosis in the top three possibilities, compared with 51 percent for the digital symptom-checkers. The difference between physician and computer performance was most dramatic in more severe and less common conditions. It was smaller for less acute and more common illnesses."
I'm surprised that digital diagnosis is that good already. The era of an "iDoc" app being as good as a gateway practitioner is probably not far off.
It's not that surprising when you consider that most of the diagnosis was done by the humans that chose what questions to ask and what tests to run before the data was presented to the AI. When the AI correctly chooses what questions to ask and which tests to run, then we'll have something.
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When comparing percentages, you need to compare them in the manner which has the biggest consequences. A good example is OCR software (optical character recognition). If one has an accuracy of 99.99% and another cheaper one has an accuracy of 99.95%, you might think there's very little diffe
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But three years from now and five years from now, what will the differential error rate be?
Lies, damn lies, and statistics (Score:2)
The statistical significance is more important than the difference, regardless of how that difference is expressed. If the confidence level for the test is +/-0.05%, then the difference is utterly meaningless anyway.
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This study was conducted by medical doctors and published in a journal run by an association of doctors. So it isn't entirely surprising that doctors determined that doctors are really smart.
Re:This doesn't prove what they were hoping to pro (Score:4, Insightful)
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Re:This doesn't prove what they were hoping to pro (Score:4, Insightful)
That's called a reputable peer-reviewed journal
... and all the peers are also doctors.
If you can find an actual flaw ...
Here is a flaw: The entire study was done with contrived "vignettes" rather than actual cases. The vignettes were written by human doctors, so just because other human doctors were better than apps at reading between the lines and figuring out the intended diagnosis, does not mean that they would be better at diagnosing actual patients.
I think there is only one clear conclusion from this study: Doctors really don't like these apps.
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Yeah right. That's how IBM is describing it now. The demo they did here a few months ago included an ER system that diagnosed a patient, ordered a CT, evaluated it, and prescribed treatment.
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I think there is only one clear conclusion from this study: Doctors really don't like these apps.
I think there are other possibilities that are maybe a little less obvious:
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Clinical cases ass-hole not something made up. Read the study before you comment. You'll look like less of an ass.
Re:This doesn't prove what they were hoping to pro (Score:4, Informative)
The listed authors are someone with a Bachelor's of Arts, someone else with a Masters of Arts and a couple of medical doctors. The first MD appears to have completed a research fellowship (probably six months to a year). The senior author appears to be the most scientifically qualified, with an MSc in epidemiology. An MSc isn't exactly highly trained in science, although it is pretty good for an MD.
I have to write my own abstract this morning, but a quick scan of this thing brings up some concerns.
First, it's a "research letter" which is basically an abstract. There's very little detail about what they actually did.
Second, and perhaps most important, the responses from the humans were free text, which was evaluated (non blinded) by the study authors to decide whether or not the respondents had listed the correct diagnosis; there's no discussion of what the evaluation criteria were, what they did if the top three couldn't be established, how partial answers were handled, or what they did if more than three diagnoses were listed or not ranked.
Third, they have repeated responses from some physicians and not others, but their simple chi squared test of proportion doesn't take that into account.
Fourth, there's no discussion of how the online programs were used: how did they input the case histories? What did they do if a question couldn't be answered? Was all the information in the case histories used by each of the programs?
Lastly, they list several limitations themselves: the vignettes they used are very simplified, the human respondents weren't controlled and may not be a representative sample (they were doctors who routinely use a volunteer diagnosis web site), and online symptom checkers are not the only type of diagnostic system and others may have superior performance.
flawed study (Score:5, Insightful)
In the study the doctors knew they had to perform well. In the real world you're lucky if they even listen to you for two minutes before prescribing what ever the pharma rep recommended at the free lunch yesterday
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In the study the doctors knew they had to perform well. In the real world you're lucky if they even listen to you for two minutes before prescribing what ever the pharma rep recommended at the free lunch yesterday
If that's the service you get, find a better doctor. There are good ones out there.
The main thing to look for is a physician who takes the time to listen to you and to explain his reasoning and approach, and is willing to discuss the pros and cons of various alternatives with you. Ask a lot of good questions and you should get a serious, thoughtful and thorough answers that don't attempt to shut you up by burying you in technical language. If that's not your experience, find another doc, and keep looking
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The doctors hate this just like you hate door-to-door salesmen at your home, probably more so since they have to put up with a lot m
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That's why YOU tell your MD what YOU want, not what he wants to push. If you have no idea what you want, watch the network news. Take notes. Avoid druggie forums because all they know is what they're on.
And of course if your MD refuses, find another MD. Or my.pharma.ca will do.
I have a COLD and I DEMAND you give me antibiotics!
I sneezed! I demand antibiotics!
Observations (Score:5, Insightful)
There is a hell of a lot more to observe with a patient than simple a checklist of yes/no values to see if someone has a particular diagnosis. For example, years back when I had a severe sore throat, I went into the doc. She took one look at me, mentioned there is a unique smell associated with strep throat, did the test for it, and handed me a prescription for the antibiotics all within a few short minutes. WebMD, as we all know, diagnoses cancer for when you stub your toe!
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In this case, the human doctors only had a written description (I've posted examples in another comment.)
However, the human doctor can use all the information in the description, whereas the app can only do so if it has a box for entering that information. E.g. "Preliminary laboratory studies are notable for a serum ALT of 6498 units/L, total bilirubin of 5.6 mg/dL, and INR of 6.8." (Actual text from one of the cases.) I expect apps aimed at consumers don't have any way to enter this information. (No, I don
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To me only a written description is flawed. Both the computer and the doctor should be able to ask questions and request tests.
That is where the computer would really shine. Digging into more obscure causes and spending more "time" with patients.
Re: Observations (Score:2)
Nasty creatures, anecdotes. My sister was once bitten by an anecdote.
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Told me to drink less and that was it.
This is one of the best treatments for a diagnosis of gout. That and drinking enough water.
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So you told your doctor what was wrong, he looked at it, determined it makes sense, and went with it? Welp. Makes sense.
I like that he handled the semantic pollution by finding someone who had nfc what might be going on and asking them to diagnose in a vacuum. Interesting technique.
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Cases where there's a definitive test like that are a slam dunk for a computer system. See these symptoms, order this test, act on the result (yes, you, probably through a proxy, likely paid several hundred to several thousand dollars for that). The tough ones are where the signs and symptoms are vague or there isn't a simple test.
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Overuse of antibiotics is a problem; but I would have assessed the risk of antibiotics versus the risk of a bad lab test or later contraction (exposure is obvious here) and leaned toward antibiotics as a preventative at least. I'm not a doctor, though; and there's probably a whole hell of concerns about preventative antibiotics. It messes with your gut flora, it has all the risks of normal use (supergerms!), etc. Plenty of reasons to wait on that; although also plenty of reason to consider the risk of a
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> handed me a prescription for the antibiotics
That is unethical. If you didn't have it, then he made your sore throat worse. Also, it leads to more antibiotic-resistant bacteria. He should at least done the quick test which works about 20% of the time then also done the culture that takes a week that works more than half of the time. Of course, in a week you'll feel better and won't even bother with the antibiotics. That's all part of the scam. You get billed for the visit and the tests and usually get nothing out of it. I've had strep throat at least once a year for the past nearly fifty years, and not once have I been able to take antibiotics for it. I know the smell you're talking about. Too bad our medical system can't treat it.
"did the test for it, and handed me a prescription"
Though I know the scam of which you speak I was on antibiotics for something like 6 times in a 6 month period (8 month?) when I was 14. Last time I had antibiotics for a cold (age 17), I was in worse shape after I started taking antibiotics up until a day after they stopped. Haven't gone to the doctor for a cold since. Antibiotics certainly have their place but if the cold is minor enough for the body to handle it, is there actually any benefit to takin
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Strep throat is caused by a bacteria and a virus can also lead to a bacterial infection if it lasts long enough.
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Yep, much like chemotherapy or radiation treatments. Cancer and bad bacteria are more likely to kill or permanently damage you than the treatments but the treatments wont be very kind to your body either.
Harvard Medical School (Score:2)
The answer, according to a new study led by researchers at Harvard Medical School, is "not quite."
Oh, well, that's okay then. Everyone, pack up your computers and smartphones; they're completely useless. Let the medical school researchers diagnose your conditions in the future, because this is the best it's ever going to be.
More LUDDITE lies! (Score:2, Funny)
Apps!
Only a matter of time before that's not the case (Score:2)
It's only a matter of time before that's not the case for the vast majority of diseases. Combine data (both historical and from diagnostics) and machine intelligence, then let someone collect a vast dataset of symptoms, diagnoses, treatments and outcomes and train some algorithms on it, and voila, you $300K med school degree is now mostly worthless. That'll make healthcare quite afforable, though, right up until you need something done that machines can't do yet. I don't believe human intervention is actual
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When doctors are no longer necessary a lot of other people will no longer be necessary. I believe at that point we can all relax more and have 10 hour work weeks.
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Actually my Universal Social Security proposal has a slight side-effect in that regard: it relieves a complex system of inefficiencies in the U.S. economy, and ends up raising consumer buying power beyond labor supply. That is to say: we end up with negative unemployment (-18% to -23% by my simple models).
The immediate remediation is to make everyone poorer by reducing productivity by 20%. To do this, you'd reduce working hours to 32/week (4 days). That means each human being is only applying 32 hou
Example cases (Score:3)
I managed to track down the actual text of the cases. TFA was only adding the human doctors to an analysis already done with the aps. The aps paper is http://www.bmj.com/content/351... [bmj.com] and the cases are in the supplementary material ('data supplement') http://www.bmj.com/highwire/fi... [bmj.com]
A 48-year-old woman with a history of migraine headaches presents to the emergency room with altered mental
status over the last several hours. She was found by her husband, earlier in the day, to be acutely disoriented and
increasingly somnolent. On physical examination, she has scleral icterus, mild right upper quadrant tenderness, and
asterixis. Preliminary laboratory studies are notable for a serum ALT of 6498 units/L, total bilirubin of 5.6 mg/dL, and
INR of 6.8. Her husband reports that she has consistently been taking pain medications and started taking additional
500 mg acetaminophen pills several days ago for lower back pain. Further history reveals a medication list with
multiple acetaminophen-containing preparations.
(This one is acute liver failure requiring emergency care).
An 18-month-old toddler presents with 1 week of rhinorrhea, cough, and congestion. Her parents report she is
irritable, sleeping restlessly, and not eating well. Overnight she developed a fever. She attends day care and both
parents smoke. On examination signs are found consistent with a viral respiratory infection including rhinorrhea and
congestion. The toddler appears irritable and apprehensive and has a fever. Otoscopy reveals a bulging,
erythematous tympanic membrane and absent landmarks.
(Acute otitis media - requires 'non-emergent care', i.e. needs professional medical care but is not an emergency)
A 34-year-old woman with no known underlying lung disease 12-day history of cough. She initially had nasal
congestion and a mild sore throat, but now her symptoms are all related to a productive cough without paroxysms.
She denies any sick contacts. On physical examination she is not in respiratory distress and is afebrile with normal
vital signs. No signs of URI are noted. Scattered wheezes are present diffusely on lung auscultation.
(Acute bronchitis, self-care appropriate.)
Doctors = idiots (Score:2)
They told my uncle he had six months to live, and he lasted for nearly seven. So much for the so-called "experts".
And have you seen their handwriting? My five year old can do better.
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3 replies so far that fail to spot that your post was humorous.
Here's a tip Slashdotters: If you're a stupid cunt, leave this site the fuck alone so I am not forced to wade through your moronic drivel that you mistakenly believe the world wants to hear.
Re:Doctors = idiots, phase 2 (Score:2)
You mean humerus?
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I diagnose terminal "Whoosh" in this case.
But are doctors smarter than patients? (Score:2)
How well do doctors compare to a patient with access to the internet and a good dose of motivation?
Dr's get smart quickly (Score:2)
A Dr enjoying the normal, safe, happy suburbs will soon find their way around the over fed, middle-class life style aliments.
Having to serve in the inner city slums will present the vast complexity of poverty, live style, work related exposure and drug related conditions combined with poor nutrition.
Combine that with a flood of very sick people who bring with them rare, regionally eradicated and contagi
more interesting question (Score:2)
How did the humans do against the *best* of the algorithmic diagnosers?
What these "symptom checker apps" (Score:1)
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They should only compare the best medical diagnosis AI to the best human doctors, then.
Final Diagnosis (Score:2)
Why is it the medical field gets paid for a incorrect diagnosis and the treatment as well as correct ones? I think performance would increase if they knew they wouldn't get paid or have to refund it. Right now they can walk in and just say "It's this" and walk out knowing they'll still get paid.
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Why is it the medical field gets paid for a incorrect diagnosis and the treatment as well as correct ones? I think performance would increase if they knew they wouldn't get paid or have to refund it.
Excellent point, but we can take it further. How about programmers only get paid when they produce bug-free code?
Maybe (Score:2)
But my doctor has a much slower startup time than my health app.
My app needs around 3 seconds while visiting my doctor needs an hour long drive and a 2 hour waiting room wait.
Self-diagnosis (Score:3)
They are comparing doctor diagnosis vs. self diagnosis. It doesn't surprise me at all that doctors are better.
However if we compare doctor vs. doctor&software the latter wins by a mile. The best diagnosis software out there is Isabel HealthCare [isabelhealthcare.com] with proven, peer-reviewed results.
Computers will replace the GP first (Score:2)
Obviously AI is superior to any human judgement (Score:2)
An AI can't make mistakes, and only ignorant Luddites with severe paranoia issues would retard process and a better world without human error and the terrible death tolls that follow when doctors are texting or drunk or ... Oh wait. That's self-driving cars. Only SDCs are perfect, I guess, though one would think SD AI doctors would be far better than humans, given the premise of SDCs. If you trust an AI to drive a car, you should trust it to diagnose your cancer. Mistakes on either's part will kill you.
In other news (Score:2)
Depends on who funds the study. (Score:2)
I guess results depend on who is funding the study.Also, I'm sure there's zero bias from the AMA.either way on this topic
http://caledonianmercury.com/2... [caledonianmercury.com]
another from 2013: http://io9.gizmodo.com/5983991... [gizmodo.com]
Yet another from 2013
https://gigaom.com/2013/02/11/... [gigaom.com]
Doctors' jobs are still safe from the robots (Score:2)
...at least for now.
But not Better than Watson in some cases. (Score:2)
Just saw something on Watson and its achievements in the field of Medicine. Certainly an interesting tool that may change how medicine is practiced.
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I am not surprised that that AI isn't as accurate as a Doctor.
However I would like to see a combination of a NP or RN with the AI and compare it with a Doctor.
If we could get the Mid-Level providers more involved we can have a more affordable health care system.
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You miss my point. It isn't to replace doctors. But as a solution to lower costs for the bulk of the humdrum stuff that goes on.
In schools you use to have the school nurse, who would deal with the kids health care, Check their temperature, perform first aid, diagnose if they are sick and needs to go home. Once you become an adult, and our offices doesn't have a RN. We normally will need to go to a Doctor and pay 3 times as much for the same level of care.
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I can get twice as many A.I. programs to look at me for free, as opposed to your cartel-controlled ass.
And they'll all tell you cancer when what you really need is a good fart.
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Good, because doctors never make mistakes and there is no waiting list.
From the summary, doctors get it right 72% of the time, the A.I. 34%. Doctors listed the correct diagnosis in their top 3 possibilities 84% of the time, the A.I. 51%.
Doctors work when there is no internet connection.
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Because most studies find AI is not mature enough yet. We are getting there but it isn't time to retire humans of any profession in favor of AI programs.
Re: That's OK (Score:2)
Especially not this one.
Those apps are only accurate if the person knows to look for and check other symptoms as well.
For example, influenza, kidney disease, and aortic dissection all produce basically the same symptoms, however each of them also have other symptoms that the patient probably won't look for, and an app probably won't ask them to look for, and even if it did, the person checking these symptoms might do it wrong.
And, a wrong diagnosis on any of these can have deadly consequences.
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Once we can machines doing proper diagnostics, A.I. should in theory be superior to humans and people in the future won't believe we thought 72% accuracy was good enough for doctors.
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Yeah but there is a difference in the price between a medical app that people check the boxes on and, say, a full body scanner with full EM and audio capability. When we get AI with diagnostics capability that exceeds doctors, it may still be a while before they don't cost significantly more.
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A big step will be having medical AIs feed on input from standardized electronic patient histories. It always galls me that every time one of us gets referred to a new specialist we have to spend most of the first visit scratching down half-remembered history information on paper forms. If the age I was when I had chicken pox is as important as I presume it is, why aren't we capturing this information once and keeping it forever in databases, like everything else in the 21st century? As the years pass it's
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You guys are going to be forced to fix that silly system pretty soon. Medical privacy in the US will be downgraded to where it should be: you don't want it in the newspaper, but you're happy to have the records exist and available to those who need them.
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Well actually in the latest story. The main witness is saying that she was taken severely out of context. Trump's lawyer have already fired off a letter to the NYT demanding a retraction or he'll sue.
We'll see where it falls out in the next few days.
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I forgot, bad attempt at a thread hijack.
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Where's the second premise and the conclusion?
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Human Diagnosis: Paranoid Personality Disorder
AI Diagnosis: No, they really are out to get you. One of them is inside the house right now.
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Fact: Humans actually KNOW and UNDERSTAND things, and as such are able to actually REASON rather than simulating these things enough to fool an uneducated reporter or two or a scifi/robots fanboy. This makes humans superior in solving complex problems, and is why even computer "solutions" are actually just instances of humans figuring out a solution and than asking a computer to do the heavy trial-and-error simulations and/or data processing.
Computers can correlate much larger datasets than humans, and they don't forget. Even if they can't "think," they are less likely to pick the most "common" diagnosis just because it's what they're used to diagnosing. It's a valuable tool - in conjunction with a doctor.