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How do you see the advancements of AI/robots affecting the career of anesthesiologists Do you think this career would benefit from including advanced technology/AI? #Spring25?
How do you see the advancements of AI/robots affecting the career of anesthesiologists? Do you think this career would benefit from including advanced technology/AI? #Spring25
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3 answers
Updated
Meganathan’s Answer
AI uses historical data to predict outcomes, often with impressive accuracy. For anesthesiologists, this means you can access insights from countless real-life situations and the wisdom of experienced consultants. This information can guide you in making important decisions, offering support that once only came with years of experience.
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Shane’s Answer
Similar to the response above, once should think about the initial uses of AI in ways that can make one's job easier, less manual or imprecise. For example, at IBM, we are using our own AI offerings such as watsonx as well as select, approved third-party tools like CoPilot and Box AI to improve the way we work on a daily basis.
So while my role has not changed because of AI, I can now use AI to analyze data between various spreadsheets, or as a way to take a large volume of information and quickly distill it for understanding. Regardless of one's career, AI will be most impactful (initially) in doing things that can free up your time to provide insights and judgments that only you as a human can provide!
So while my role has not changed because of AI, I can now use AI to analyze data between various spreadsheets, or as a way to take a large volume of information and quickly distill it for understanding. Regardless of one's career, AI will be most impactful (initially) in doing things that can free up your time to provide insights and judgments that only you as a human can provide!
Updated
Ansh’s Answer
AI and robotics are definitely starting to make an impact in anesthesiology, but not in a way that replaces anesthesiologists — at least not anytime soon. Instead, they’re becoming powerful tools to assist with precision, monitoring, and risk prediction. For example, AI can help analyze vital signs in real-time to adjust drug dosages more safely, or flag when a patient is trending toward instability during surgery.
Anesthesiologists still bring critical judgment, intuition, and quick decision-making in high-stakes environments — things AI isn't close to mastering. That said, the field could benefit a lot by embracing AI: improving patient outcomes, reducing human error, and streamlining routine tasks. So rather than seeing AI as a threat, I think anesthesiologists who work alongside these tools will become even more effective.
Anesthesiologists still bring critical judgment, intuition, and quick decision-making in high-stakes environments — things AI isn't close to mastering. That said, the field could benefit a lot by embracing AI: improving patient outcomes, reducing human error, and streamlining routine tasks. So rather than seeing AI as a threat, I think anesthesiologists who work alongside these tools will become even more effective.