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Robots will not replace human doctors: Experts

Illustration. (Photo by Online Marketing on Unsplash)

Jakarta (Indonesia Window) – As technology keeps growing from time to time, the question that whether or not robots would take over all works, including in health care, which are still being handled by humans always arise.

On a panel of the World Economic Forum in Dubai, United Arab Emirates on Thursday (Jan 23) some experts answered that advancing technologies in the health care industry should not replace doctors and nurses who provide primary care to patients.

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A report from Arab News quoted here on Friday said that the panellists who discussed the role of artificial intelligence (AI) and robotics in the medical field stated that all treatments should remain focused on the needs of patients, adding that “robots can’t replace doctors.”

But Leif Johansson, chairman of the board at pharmaceutical company, AstraZeneca AB, said the technology would be especially essential to “screening programs and extending access to care.”

“The only way to support primary care centers with low-skilled people, for screening purposes, will be with AI, robotics,” he explained, citing India as an example of a country with a shortage of qualified doctors who can address the needs of a massive population.

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While technology presents potential benefits to the industry, Lisa Sanders, Associate Professor at the Yale Medical School, said she was concerned current technology faced a “barrier in data input.”

“How is AI or the robot going to get the data they need from patients?” Sanders, the doctor who was the inspiration behind the hit US TV show “House,” said, questioning how technology “would be able to assess patients when they’re complex and confused.”

Jodi Halpern, a professor of bioethics, shared the same sentiment, and highlighted what she described as three important situations when “a relationship with an actual human doctor makes a difference for effective healthcare.”

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One was taking medical history from patients, Halpern said, explaining most patients would only disclose personal information when there’s empathy from doctors.

“If we don’t get a good history, we won’t get a good treatment,” she added.

Another was ensuring patients take medication, and lastly was helping people deal with bad news.

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Sanders, a physician herself, said “it’s not the thinking” that doctors need help from technology for, but “other things like dealing with poorly conceived systems of medical records.”

Reporting by Indonesia Window

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