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Sitting here in a climate controlled room, I can say that I would much rather die behind the wheel instead of as a passenger of an automobile.
Because of how inscrutable LLMs (and AI in general) are I have an innate fear that the conclusions they reach are not based on the same reasoning you or I might make. Like it could be a completely alien way of thinking that arrives at the same solution. Without knowing (specifically) how AI achieves it outcomes, I am weary about accepting their solutions blindly.
You are not 'behind the wheel' either way. The actual process by which medical decisions are made and applied is, in Western countries, so labyrinthine and complex and insane that no human understands it. The addition of LLMs seems to hardly make any difference at all.
What prompts you to make such a claim?
Quite a large chunk of medicine has been algorithmized, with the role of clinicians largely reduced to interpreting said guidelines, choosing the appropriate ones and administering treatment. An example of something utterly streamlined would be the treatment of Acute Coronary Syndrome.
Then, there are situations that aren't nearly as cut or dry, or multiple conflicting requirements in a highly comorbid patient, at which point you do really need a doctor to think things through.
Frankly speaking, while some medical decisions might be made for less than noble reasons such as liability minimization, the majority of them are made with relatively clear underpinnings, making me think such a claim is highly unwarranted.
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You mean "wary". "Weary" means tired, and comes from "wear" in the sense of "worn out" or "weariness". "Wary" means cautious or concerned, and is related to "beware" and "aware".
I'm late because I don't sign in often, but thanks for the correction.
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