Science and Technology
Hospitals Test AI Assistants as Doctors Demand Oversight
Healthcare systems are experimenting with AI assistants for scheduling, imaging, triage, and clinical notes. Supporters say the tools can reduce pressure on staff and speed up basic decisions.
Doctors and patient advocates are asking for a slower conversation. A useful assistant can still make mistakes, and a hospital cannot treat software as a substitute for responsibility.
The strongest future for medical AI may be one where technology does less pretending and more supporting: helping professionals notice patterns while leaving final judgment where it belongs.
