“The stakes are very high,” he said, “because this is a life and death issue.” Every patient's anatomy is different. as well as disease behavior in patients

“I look at[the images from]the CT scan and MRI and then perform the surgery” by controlling the robot arm, Parekh said. “If you want the robot to perform the surgery on its own, It must understand the whole picture. How to read CT scans and MRIs.” The robot will also have to learn how to perform keyhole surgery, or laparoscopic surgery that uses very small incisions.

The idea that AI is infallible is difficult to take seriously when no technology is perfect. Of course, this automated technology is interesting from a research point of view. But recovering from a failed surgery performed by an automated robot is a monumental feat. Who do you punish when something goes wrong? Who has had their medical license revoked? Humans are not wrong either. But at least patients have the comfort of knowing they've had years of training. and will be held accountable if something goes wrong. AI models are crude simulations of humans. which sometimes has unpredictable behavior and have no moral compass

Another concern is whether overreliance on autonomous robots in surgery could lead to a decline in doctors' abilities and knowledge. Similar to facilitating dating through an app, it results in relevant social skills becoming rusty.

If the doctor is tired and overworked Which is why, the researchers suggest, this technology is valuable. Perhaps the systemic issues causing the shortage should be addressed instead. It has been widely reported that the United States is experiencing a serious shortage of doctors due to Unable to increase access to the field– The country is facing a shortage of 10,000 to 20,000 surgeons by 2036. Association of American Medical Colleges