aportes a la gestión necesaria para la sustentabilidad de la SALUD PÚBLICA como figura esencial de los servicios sociales básicos para la sociedad humana, para la familia y para la persona como individuo que participa de la vida ciudadana.
jueves, 27 de junio de 2024
Eating rocks: The case for early integration of medical ethics into AI product development By Rebecca Soskin Hicks and Amelia Burke-GarciaJune 27, 2024
https://www.statnews.com/2024/06/27/medical-ethics-early-integration-ai-health-product-development/?utm_campaign=morning_rounds&utm_medium=email&_hsenc=p2ANqtz-_2MIz4-q4BRs67hHt96z6VX5wj_jwIqJIodpg-SYU4v_W9dT_eI-vJTrEjB0W5Yey8KU4ggeaYsg7Pjv-HdGzTqbG38Q&_hsmi=313371527&utm_content=313371527&utm_source=hs_email
You’ve probably noticed that Google recently integrated Gemini, its new large language model, into its search engine. This could someday become a critical tool for people going to Google with health questions, which happens 70,000 times per minute. But in a new First Opinion essay, two authors say that the technology isn’t quite there yet. See: that time Gemini told a user that “geologists recommend eating at least one small rock each day.”
There are four fundamental principles of medical ethics — non-maleficence, beneficence, autonomy, and justice — that clinicians and researchers use to make morally sound judgments. AI products that are intended to or may produce health information or medical advice should not be exempt from following these ethical principles, the authors write.
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