January 16, 2025 Customer Newsletter
- Feedback on Nonphysician X-ray Reads
- ABP Exam Registration
- Reviving Primary Care
- Free Month For You and a Friend
- AI Doctor Passes Medical Exam
- QUIZ- Test Your Knowledge
ACR Wants Radiologist Feedback as CDC Eyes Nonphysician X-ray Reads
It begins. In this case it is proposed CDC guidelines for NP and PA as designated readers for workers participating in federal health surveillance programs. The American College of Radiology is soliciting feedback from current and former physician program participants, and is requesting responses by February 3. The CDC has given a March 17 deadline for comments.
AI is definitely not up to the task of open diagnosis of X-Rays, nor consistent results in rule-out queries, though it does better there. This fight is still between physicians and midlevel practice scopes.
ACR Wants Radiologist Feedback as CDC Eyes Nonphysician X-ray Reads
Can Medical Schools Funnel More Doctors Into the Primary Care Pipeline?(Spoiler - no.) Medical students respond to both money and regard, and that makes specialization much more attractive than primary care. Specialization is also, in a lot of fields, a guarantee of employment - hello IR - an important factor when you are graduating with a pile of nondischargeable debt. Tuition-free medical schools can help with the financial motivations behind specialization, but not the regard factor. Can Medical Schools Funnel More Doctors into the Primary Care Pipeline? ‘Striking Paradox’: AI Doctor Passes Medical Exams, Fails with Real-Life DiagnosisIf you’ve been reading our AI summaries, this is not a striking paradox. The failure of the AI to ask appropriate questions, expand diagnoses, or deal with extraneous unrelated information is well-known. At this point, most of the basic LLM models can pass a written USMLE exam and score well on standard certifications. They do not handle all sorts of imaging diagnostics well—those are CNN models (convolutional neural networks) rather than LLMs (large language models). QUIZ QUESTIONA 12-year-old boy with a known history of asthma presents to the ER with an acute asthma exacerbationA 12-year-old boy with a known history of asthma presents acutely to the emergency department with an acute asthma exacerbation. He requires supplemental oxygen and continuous albuterol therapy. He also requires intravenous magnesium sulfate and subcutaneous terbutaline. Due to the increased level of respiratory support, he is transferred to the intensive care unit for further medical management. |