Artificial intelligence in medicine: A revolution - 19/02/26
Resumen |
“AI is like protein powder: if you don’t make the effort to muscle up your brain, it won’t do the work for you.” Terence Mahier. AI in medicine is a “learned tool” that will lead to a type of medicine that is: augmented; predictive; efficient. A leap forward for all imaging techniques across all medical specialties: reduction of medical errors; implementation of intelligent medical devices; amplified research, particularly with digital twins. While artificial intelligence is becoming ingrained in our every action, a recent MIT study warns that the unwise use of these tools (LLMs) could well weaken our cognitive abilities. Unless we make it a reasoned and informed ally. AI does not “empty the brain”, but AI can only function correctly if the human brain is functioning perfectly. All recent studies show that the combination of Natural Intelligence (NI) and Artificial Intelligence (AI) is essential for optimized results. If humans remain passive towards AI, catastrophes will inevitably occur. In medicine, as elsewhere, you must first think, and then act. AI is a true revolution, guided by what the Haute Autorité de santé – High Authority for Health (HAS) highlights: the Apprendre, Vérifier, Estimer, Communiquer – Learn, Verify, Estimate, Communicate (A.V.E.C.) method guides health professionals. Is there any specific part of this translation you’d like to discuss or perhaps another text you need translated?
El texto completo de este artículo está disponible en PDF.Keywords : AI, Revolution
Esquema
Vol 51 - N° 1
P. 31 - mars 2026 Regresar al númeroBienvenido a EM-consulte, la referencia de los profesionales de la salud.
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