A new study found that physicians have a surprisingly poor knowledge of the benefits and harms of common medical treatments. Almost 80% overestimated the benefits, and two-thirds overestimated the harms. And, as Aaron Carroll pointed out, it's not just that they were off, but "it's how off they often were." Anyone out there who still doesn't think artificial intelligence (AI) is needed in health care? The authors noted that previous studies have found that patients often overestimate benefits as well, but tended to minimize potential harms. Not only do physicians overestimate harm, they "underestimate how often most treatments have no effects on patients -- either harmful or beneficial"...
Aaron Carroll
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Doctors And Hospitals Got At Least $3.5 Billion From Industry In Just Five Months
Julia Belluz | Vox | September 30, 2014
...Lawsuits in recent years revealed that doctors' relationships with industry can alter their prescribing practices and decision-making for the worse, and pharmaceutical companies have paid out billions of dollars in fines for fraudulent marketing practices...
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IT Entrepreneurs Rush Into Healthcare, But Will Human Touch Be Missing?
Darius Tahir | Modern Healthcare | September 6, 2014
A new health IT firm called Omada Health, which recently secured $23 million in startup financing, is working with people at risk of developing diabetes to help them head off the full-blown condition...
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To Err Is Human, To Diagnose Artificial Intelligence is...?
By Kim Bellard | September 5, 2016
We Are Number Last
Margalit Gur-Arie | On Health Care Technology | June 23, 2014
The Commonwealth Fund just published its fourth Mirror, Mirror on the Wall study comparing the U.S. health care system with other countries, and as in all previous studies, we ranked as the absolutely worst health care system in the developed world, bar none...
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