A policy I saw coming out of an NHS (UK) department mandated ‘human-in-the-loop’ which is essentially what the article mentions in the end. The risk is that over time clinicians may become complacent with ‘good enough’ and don’t bother to review thoroughly. And it may be easy to spot mistakes, but not necessarily omissions unless you keep your own notes. More so after a long session, although medical appointments are typically short and focused.
On a positive note, in my experience clinicians using LLMs do indeed spend more time engaging with service users. In an ideal world, they would be given time to engage and take notes, but this is not going to happen.
A policy I saw coming out of an NHS (UK) department mandated ‘human-in-the-loop’ which is essentially what the article mentions in the end. The risk is that over time clinicians may become complacent with ‘good enough’ and don’t bother to review thoroughly. And it may be easy to spot mistakes, but not necessarily omissions unless you keep your own notes. More so after a long session, although medical appointments are typically short and focused.
On a positive note, in my experience clinicians using LLMs do indeed spend more time engaging with service users. In an ideal world, they would be given time to engage and take notes, but this is not going to happen.