Where AI helps and where it doesn't in medical practice. Evidence-based analysis of AI tools, chatbot risks, and the line between useful automation and replacing the physician-patient relationship.
One in three adults now ask AI chatbots for health advice. Here is what those chatbots actually say about fertility, NaPro, and RRM -- and what shapes their answers.
AI documentation tools are reducing physician burnout. But for practices serving privacy-sensitive patients, the trade-offs deserve serious thought.
Pew Research found that most Americans are uncomfortable with AI in their healthcare. The data validates what many practitioners already sense.
The National Eating Disorders Association replaced its human helpline with an AI chatbot. Within days, it was recommending calorie counting to patients with eating disorders.
AI health chatbots have no malpractice insurance. When they give bad advice, the liability question has no clear answer yet.
Insurance companies are automating patient interactions at scale. Here is what that means for practices built on the physician-patient relationship.
AI health tools hallucinate, fabricate references, and deliver one-size-fits-all answers. Here is how they perform on reproductive health questions.