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AI is an excellent tool. I have no problem using AI, but I do struggle with the abuse of AI that has become normalized far too quickly.
Am an open minded person, though haven't had any real interference of AI in any aspect, but if it can aid clinical operations, I would not mind.
I haven't had to deal with AI to any real extent thus far, but if it could do something that saved time I'd try to keep an open mind. It's always important to consider what it can do. It's trained on what already exists, so it's not going to be on the cutting edge of anything. But asking it to do something like find patterns seems like an acceptable use for it.
I build them for my team.
My business partners have mixed feelings/concerns, but quickly see the value…once you get past their worries of being replaced. As long as the UI is easy/intuitive and it simplifies their current process, I’ve not encountered pervasive resistance.
I’ve definitely used my company’s AI tool for help in reframing goals, helping to condense some of my more longwinded emails… (and for my own healthcare, my neuro’s office uses an AI program to compare MRIs to check for progression from their patient’s last MRI.)
When used as a tool, AI is fantastic. When you try to replace humans (for art, for innovation, etc) that’s when it falls short and you end up with junk. My main concern about AI is the environmental impact more than anything else.