Playing to our human strengths to prepare medical students for the future

We are living in an age where artificial intelligence and astounding technological advances are bringing truly remarkable change to healthcare. Medical knowledge and skills which form the core responsibility of doctors such as making diagnoses may increasingly be delivered by robots. Machines are gr...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Julie Chen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Korean Society of Medical Education 2017-09-01
Series:Korean Journal of Medical Education
Subjects:
Online Access:http://kjme.kr/upload/pdf/kjme-2017-65.pdf
Description
Summary:We are living in an age where artificial intelligence and astounding technological advances are bringing truly remarkable change to healthcare. Medical knowledge and skills which form the core responsibility of doctors such as making diagnoses may increasingly be delivered by robots. Machines are gradually acquiring human abilities such as deep learning and empathy. What, then is the role of doctors in future healthcare? And what direction should medical schools be taking to prepare their graduates? This article will give an overview of the evolving technological landscape of healthcare and examine the issues undergraduate medical education may have to address. The experience at The University of Hong Kong will serve as a case study featuring several curricular innovations that aim to empower medical graduates with the capabilities to thrive in the future.
ISSN:2005-727X
2005-7288