The pace of evolution in generative artificial intelligence (AI) is so rapid that keeping up and forming an opinion about it is truly challenging. AI represents one of those radical — and now inevitable — revolutions that require continuous reflection on how to amplify its benefits while minimizing its risks.
In the medical field, in particular, new technologies can bring enormous benefits by accelerating and improving diagnostic processes, personalizing preventive and therapeutic interventions, and relieving increasingly understaffed personnel of bureaucratic tasks that waste precious time. In the healthcare world, the fear that AI will replace humans and lead to job losses does not exist because the increasing workload is much greater than the number of people who are able and willing to wor