HealthPaging Dr. Algorithm What's going on: If you’ve ever left a doctor’s office with more questions than answers, you’re not alone — and AI might be inching closer to changing that. In a recent test conducted by Microsoft, its AI health care tool nailed the correct diagnosis in 85.5% of complex medical cases — more than four times the accuracy rate of experienced doctors, who averaged just 20%. Both sides worked through 300+ real cases from the New England Journal of Medicine, simulating real-world decision-making. The catch? Doctors didn’t have access to their usual lifelines — no colleagues, no reference materials, and (ironically) no AI. Still, that kind of performance gap is hard to ignore. What it means: Robots aren’t replacing your primary care doctor anytime soon — and that’s not the goal. Microsoft says the AI tool is meant to support clinicians. After all, humans still need to handle ambiguity, build trust, and catch the moment you start spiraling — things AI can’t do (yet). Meanwhile, it’s hard not to wonder about the tech’s growing role in medicine. AI is already used in hospitals and clinics, with over 70% of physicians relying on it in some form. These new results suggest it could play an even bigger part. Now, if it could just solve appointment delays, confusing bills, and the struggle to be taken seriously. Related: Planned Parenthood Could Be Forced To Choose: Stop Abortions or Lose Funding (NYT Gift Link) |