Home / Health / Curbside Consult with Dr. Jayne: HIStalk Recap – November 3, 2025

Curbside Consult with Dr. Jayne: HIStalk Recap – November 3, 2025

Curbside Consult with Dr. Jayne: HIStalk Recap – November 3, 2025

The Evolving Reality of AI in Healthcare: A​ CMIO‘s‍ Perspective

The hype‍ around Artificial Intelligence in healthcare has ⁢been…intense. After attending recent industry discussions and⁤ reflecting on⁢ the ‌past year, it’s clear‍ we’re navigating a complex landscape. It’s‌ a world of‌ genuine potential, frustrating roadblocks, and a healthy dose of vendor-driven realities. As a seasoned CMIO, I want to ‍share my take on some ‌common⁤ pronouncements about AI, and more importantly, spark a conversation about your experiences.

Let’s break down⁢ some‌ of the predictions made recently, and where we stand now.

Evaluating ⁣the Promises: A​ Year Later

Here’s a look at some statements circulating last year, and my assessment of their accuracy today:

* “AI will fundamentally change healthcare⁣ as we know it.” ‍ Mostly true, but the change is proving more nuanced than initially⁣ predicted.The foundational shift is happening, but adoption and impact ⁤are uneven.
* “I’m cautiously optimistic about generative AI in clinical applications; it seems like just one more thing.” Spot on. We’ve seen explosive growth, ⁤but also ⁣a growing skepticism. The initial excitement is settling into a more realistic assessment ‍of​ benefits and limitations.
* “AI is going to bring‍ back the humanity‍ in medicine. We will actually have time with patients rather than just taking a‌ bill-and-go approach.” A‌ 50/50 proposition.‍ While AI can reduce administrative burden, studies ⁣haven’t consistently shown that time savings translate to more patient-facing time. More robust research is crucial.
* “By 2025, this ​is totally going to⁣ bring the joy back into medicine.” Regrettably, a thumbs down. We’re past⁢ 2025, ​and the core challenges of medical practise -‌ administrative overhead, burnout, ⁤and systemic​ issues – remain.
* “Data quality isn’t attractive. It’s​ not going to wind up on a movie poster.” Subjective!‍ Many of ⁣us do ⁤find beauty in ‌clean, normalized data. It’s the foundation of ​reliable⁢ AI, and frankly, ⁣a well-maintained dataset is a thing of pride.
* “Vendors kind of care about health,but really⁣ want​ to make money.” Sadly,all ⁢too true. It’s a spectrum, but the profit ‌motive is undeniably a driving force.
* “Just because it ⁢has⁣ AI in the name doesn’t ⁣mean it’s‌ useful.” Absolutely. AI is⁢ a buzzword,⁤ and ​many products leverage it ‌without delivering meaningful value.
* “I hate the subscription model. You used to be able to just buy stuff.” A sentiment shared by many. The shift to perpetual⁤ subscriptions continues to be a pain point.
* “I’m tired of hearing‌ about ‘move fast and break things.’ Vendors need to ⁤move ‍fast, but also ⁤heal their ⁢broken things just like​ hospitals do.” A worldwide truth among CMIOs. Stability and reliability are paramount in healthcare.
* “AI is ‍just giving us an escalating arms ‌race of appeals and​ denials. ⁢They say we’re diagnosing too much sepsis even though they‍ wanted us to find‍ sepsis sooner.” The “Spy‌ vs. ⁤Spy”⁢ dynamic is real. ⁣ Payers ⁢and providers are constantly reacting to each other’s⁣ AI-driven strategies.
* ⁢ “Ambient documentation adoption⁢ will be limited because the operations people want a tangible ROI. How do you put a dollar amount on physician wellbeing? Our arguments about turnover‌ and recruitment fall on deaf ears. they’ll probably just ⁤pass⁢ the cost ⁣on ​to clinicians.” Unfortunately, ‌this⁣ is playing ⁢out in ‍many organizations. Demonstrating ROI‌ beyond cost savings⁤ remains a notable ⁢hurdle.

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The Challenge:​ Automating the Odious

One of the most compelling ideas I heard recently was a ‌speaker’s challenge​ to ⁢the audience:‌ “Go play ⁣with‍ ChatGPT and try to make ‍it do the part of ‌your profession that you hate.”

It’s a powerful concept.⁢ But ​where are the real wins? ⁢what tasks are‌ you successfully offloading to⁣ AI?

Here are some areas where I’m seeing potential, and where I’m still searching for ⁣solutions:

* Successful Automations:

* Summarizing lengthy ⁢documents: AI excels at ‌condensing complex details, saving valuable time.
* **Drafting

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