The use of AI at the doctor's office raises urgent questions about risk, equity, and informed consent for Black patients. Here's what you deserve to know.
From automation to adaptive care, healthcare’s smartest machines are learning to care.
A new proposal in JAMA Internal Medicine suggests that the FDA should create an approval pathway for medical AI tools that parallels how physicians are trained and licensed.
11don MSN
Major gaps block genetic evaluation and testing for Black and low income patients, study finds
Black patients and patients from socioeconomically disadvantaged neighborhoods are dramatically under-represented in genetics clinics—often at rates half or less than those of white patients or ...
Artificial intelligence (AI) tools to boost people’s health gained traction in 2025, promising to personalise medical care, ...
The article notes that Brighton, NY, just south of Rochester, offers an ideal balance of convenience, accessibility, and ...
Allowing entry to medical school directly from high school would be challenging, but not because the quality of doctors would ...
Recommending individualized care upends a century-old model of care, but it also corresponds to what many practices are ...
It's not that unusual for a 20-something to text Mom from the doctor's office for help answering a health question, but ...
The primary care provider shortage is a national problem, and it’s particularly acute in Massachusetts. Some medical groups, ...
Hospitals and health systems are entering a period of rapid acceleration in AI. Clinical leaders are reporting tangible gains, from automated note-taking to clearer visibility into patient histories, ...
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