Actively allowing COVID misinformation here was the last straw for me; I spent hundreds of hours on Twitter trying to do the opposite.
Hope to connect elsewhere at some point in the future!👋👋👋
AI must be safe, accurate, & ethical in patient care. Physicians must lead, shape, & influence AI in medicine. Join us in ensuring AI serves humanity, guided by empathy & ethical practice.
Exec Summary: https://t.co/VZnnA9bH2b
Full Charter: https://t.co/O5yus80xlb
After leaving Twitter, I found a lot more time on my hands! Wanted to announce a new project from @MDCalc and physician AI enthusiasts:
📝The Physicians' Charter for Responsible AI!
Join us on this journey: https://t.co/jZvTLHTF9J #physicianscharter#AIinMedicine
📃 Inside The Physicians' Charter:
- Full paper with our “10 Rules of the Road” 🛣️
- An executive summary for quick insights 📚
- Explore & endorse the charter on our website 💻
My mortgage company call center answers with a generic “We apologize for customers affected by the recent catastrophe” and that just perfectly summarizes America
It should be criminal to run a customer service call center and not offer the “we will hold your place in line and call you back when it’s your turn” option
@khadijakamala That's not how it's working in practice in Canada. I'm absolutely supportive of healthcare change — I made this video in 2002 — but when the work load doubles or triples, something's gotta give.
https://t.co/ZpkLJQhhWo
@Boghuma @AneeshMehtaMD I'd say the only common one is infection — all the others are "uncommon." Other uncommon ones:
—Hyperthermia (malignant or environmental)
—Toxidromes (Serotonin syndrome, NMS, sympathomimetics, anticholingerics, benzo/ETOH withdrawal, ASA overdose)
—Thyroid storm
—Post-stroke