Could ChatGPT Replace Doctors in Infection Consulting Scenarios? – Neuroscience News

Summary: While there is clear potential to use ChatGPT in a clinical setting, researchers say the AI algorithm may not yet be a reliable way of replacing the family doctor, especially when it comes to making effective decisions about prescribing antibiotics for infections.

Source: University of Liverpool

Researchers from the University of Liverpool have tested whether the AI-powered chatbot ChatGPT could be used to make decisions about prescribing patients with antibiotics.

In a letter published inThe Lancet Infectious Diseases, academics from the Institute of Systems, Molecular and Integrative Biology show that, whileartificial intelligencecant yet replace thefamily doctor, there is clear potential for technology to play a role inclinical practice.

The researchers presented ChatGPT with eight hypothetical infection scenarios which people would commonly consult their doctor about (such as a chest infection). They then assessed the advice delivered by the technology for its appropriateness, consistency and its impact onpatient safety.

Theassessmentfound that ChatGPT understood the scenarios and provided coherent answers, including disclaimers, and signposting patients to sources of advice. It also appeared to understand the need to only prescribeantibioticswhen there was evidence of bacterial infection.

However, ChatGPT provided unsafe advice in complex scenarios and where important information was not explicitly provided.

Interestingly, the AI tended to focus on the type of antibiotic prescribed in each scenario rather than other factors, reflecting the assumptions often initially made by doctors during consultation.

Following the experiment, the researchers have now developed a checklist for standards that AI should meet in order to be considered for use in clinical practice in the future.

Co-author of the letter, Dr. Alex Howard said, It was fascinating to see the potential of artificial intelligence in health care demonstrated through this experiment testing ChatGPTs ability to give antibiotic treatment advice.

With the rise of antibiotic resistance posing a significant threat to global health, the ability of AI to provide accurate and safe treatment advice could revolutionize the way we approach patient care. We look forward to further exploration of this technology and its implications for the future of health care.

Author: Press OfficeSource: University of LiverpoolContact: Press Office University of LiverpoolImage: The image is in the public domain

Original Research: Open access.ChatGPT and antimicrobial advice: the end of the consulting infection doctor? by Alex Howard et al. Lancet Infectious Diseases

Abstract

ChatGPT and antimicrobial advice: the end of the consulting infection doctor?

Generative artificial intelligence (AI) models have proliferated in the past 2 years. ChatGPTa large language model (LLM) developed by OpenAI (San Francisco, CA)mimics natural language and solves cognitive problems by reinforcing learning from online resources using human feedback.

Despite access to limited medical data, ChatGPT has medical licensing examination performance as an undergraduate third-year medical student, and has, therefore, stimulated urgent discussions within medicine.

Stokel-Walker and van Noorden discuss the implications of generative AI for science and describe how ChatGPT could answer some open-ended medical queries almost as well as the average human physician could, although it still had shortcomings and unreliabilities.

Read more from the original source:
Could ChatGPT Replace Doctors in Infection Consulting Scenarios? - Neuroscience News

Related Posts