Celeste Roberge’s sculpture “The Weight of Grief” #art
Posts by Josh Briscoe
My body is not my own. What does that mean for intractable, hot button bioethical debates? open.substack.com/pub/familyme...
jamanetwork-com.proxy.lib.duke.edu/journals/jam... from @jama.com If AI were a medication, we'd be putting it through far more rigorous testing before wide deployment...
Hope springs eternal... familymeetingnotes.substack.com/p/a-machine-...
www.npr.org/2026/02/14/n... I wasn’t expecting “whether you want it or not” to feature so prominently so soon in using AI in health care…
Cartoon. Person says to other person „We invented a robot that answers questions.“, adding, „we just have to feed it 10 baby giraffes a day“. The other person asks „But it answers the questions correctly?“ Person responds „Oh my goodness, no. No no no no no.“ By Aram J. French Appropriated due to missing alt text
We had no way of anticipating how the car would revolutionize the landscape. With it came highways, streets, drunk driving, day trips to the sea, road rage, etc etc. We weren't intentional in how we adopted the car nor how we adopted the EMR. What culture do we intend to create with AI? 10/10
(It is both more mundane and more laborious to double-check the output of someone/something else than to just do it yourself, as any attending earnestly reading over a trainee's notes can testify) 9/10
So, too, with the rest of medicine: all standardized technique. What we want is to make the red numbers black; the dispel the shadows on the CT scan. Humans are in the loop - for now, and practicing a form of medicine that is itself a shadow of what once was. 8/10
We're prepared for it because the practice of medicine is already a desiccated technical endeavor. A healthcare leader can discuss doing away with medical interpreters as if they're parts in a machine and offer no human value to the encounter itself. Translation is all technique and no culture. 7/10
I would suggest that we both are and are not prepared for this. We're prepared for it in the same way a turkey is prepared for Thanksgiving; the culture of medicine has fashioned the clinical encounter into one that is ripe for harvesting by various stakeholders. 6/10
There's also growing interest in AI surrogate decision-makers. For years this was a theoretical and nuanced debate relegated to ethics journals. Now proof-of-concept trials have been published in NEJM AI. Are we prepared for this? familymeetingnotes.substack.com/p/a-machine-... 5/10
What I didn't hear discussed in this convo was how AI scribes will almost certainly increase the degree of surveillance within the clinical encounter. Nothing from recent decades would suggest otherwise: the EMR was used by various stakeholders to pry into that space, why not AI scribes? 4/10
But saddled with the burdens of modern technopoly - the challenges and admin oversight of the EMR, the "always on" access of inbasket messages, etc. - have driven clinicians to embrace the promises of AI. 3/10
Clinicians are desperate for "faster horses" - a phrase that reflects early 20th century expectations of what the next advance after the horse-drawn carriage might offer. The automobile wasn't a faster horse; it was something altogether different. 2/10
It probably shouldn't be surprising to me anymore that clinicians are absolutely enamored with AI, just as they're usually enamored with technology more broadly (as evidenced by, e.g., allure of interventionalist specialities over primary care). 1/10
Full disclosure: I haven't read the book they discuss in this episode of @geripal.bsky.social so my comments are just related to the convo. geripal.org/ai-and-healt... #medsky
My book has a cover! I wish I could share it with you right now, but unfortunately you'll have to wait until August 18, 2026. But you can preorder it now if you want.
www.amazon.com/Resisting-Th...
Clinicians talking with admin in several years:
“What would you say you do here?”
“I told you! I take the clinical recommendations from the AI so the patient doesn’t have to. I have people skills! I HAVE PEOPLE SKILLS!”
Really troubled by this question in a popular surgical critical care study book…
Surgical Critical Care and Emergency Surgery
Topic is early v late dialysis and so much on this topic is know and just disappointing to this question…. The keyed answer was….
The consent form Louis Waskansky signed before undergoing the first-ever human heart transplant, in 1967.
Media outlets sharpened their pens by telling us that cars and trucks hit pedestrians and cyclists instead of drivers. Now they rinse and repeat with AI.
[Scene is a kitchen - a middle aged woman called JANET is boiling peas at the stove. A younger more colourfully dressed woman named LIZ approached her.] JANET: Ugh... LIZ: What's up? JANET: I am so bored of cooking peas! LIZ: Have you tried... AI peas? JANET: AI peas? LIZ: They're peas with AI! [Liz holds up to us a packet of peas labelled: Pea-i AI - Peas with AI]. LIZ: Al-powered peas harness the potential of your peas JANET: What LIZ [Now a voiceover as we cut to a whizzy technology diagram of peas all connected by meaningless dotted lines] Why not take your peas to the next level with Al Peas' new Al tools to power your peas? [Show a techno diagram of a pea with a label reading 'AI' pointing to a random zone in it] LIZ: Each pea has Al in a way we haven't quite worked out yet but it's fine [Show Janet and Liz now in a Matrix-style world of peas] LIZ: With Al peas you can supercharge productivity and make AI work for your peas! JANET: What LIZ: Shut up LIZ: Our game-changing Pea-Al gives you the freedom to unlock the potential of the power of the future of your peas workflow From opening the bag of peas to boiling the peas to eating the peas To spending millions on adding Al to the peas and then having to work out what that even means. JANET: Is it really necessary to- LIZ [Grabbing Janet by the collar]: THE PEAS HAVE GOT AI, JANET [Cut to an advert ending screen, with the bag of peas and the slogan: AI PEAS: Just 'Peas' for god's sake buy the AI peas. [Ends]
Every ad now
I think Derek Thompson is right to claim Alasdair MacIntyre was only half right when he argued our society had lost moral cohesion. We're still bound by a moral framework: the market. www.derekthompson.org/p/the-26-mos...
For help with attribution and sourcing, Grammarly is releasing a citation finder agent that automatically generates correctly formatted citations backing up claims in a piece of writing, and an expert review agent that provides personalized, topic-specific feedback.
Screenshot from Grammarly's demo of inserting a post-hoc citation. https://www.grammarly.com/ai-agents/citation-finder
It is not "attribution and sourcing" to generate post-hoc citations that have not been read and did not inform the student's writing. Those should be regarded as fraudulent: artifacts testifying to human actions and thought that did not occur.
www.theverge.com/news/760508/...
Coming back to this, I'm still struck by the implication that academics should care if the AI pushers "trust" all our work that's done without AI.
I don't know, man, you all seemed to trust our work enough to steal it from us wholesale.
To what extent is it our job as consultants to manage or attend to clinician distress? What happens when that clinician distress leads to conflict? #medsky
Guests Sara Johnson, Yael Schenker, & Anne Kelly.
👉 Post: bit.ly/GeriPalEp385
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