▲ 2 r/ArtificialNtelligence+1 crossposts

Is AI turning physicians into “proofreaders” instead of decision-makers?

This was an interesting read. It discusses how AI is being integrated into clinical workflows and raises the concern that physicians may be shifting more into a “verification” role reviewing and correcting AI-generated outputs rather than making fully independent decisions. It also touches on whether this actually improves efficiency or just changes the nature of the workload.

https://www.medicaleconomics.com/view/is-ai-turning-you-from-physician-to-proofreader-

Do you think AI is genuinely helping clinicians, or is it adding another layer of review and responsibility?

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u/UpstairsCamel9574 — 4 days ago

Life is About the Journey of Searching

The roots of life are very secretive; discovering those secrets is essential for us.
Only those who keep searching feel hunger every day; as long as the search exists within, life will have taste.

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u/UpstairsCamel9574 — 2 months ago

I’ve been looking into how AI is being used in medical billing and coding workflows.

It seems AI is already helping with tasks like automation, claims processing support, and error detection, but still struggles with complex insurance rules and edge cases that require human judgment.

I’m curious how people in coding and billing actually see this is AI making a noticeable difference in day-to-day work, or is it still limited in real-world usage?

reddit.com
u/UpstairsCamel9574 — 2 months ago