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Miguel Afonso CaetanoonMastodon1d ago
"A study of physicians in Poland who specialize in endoscopy — the use of flexible probes to examine the inside of the human body — shows how quickly AI tools can erode human abilities. The physicians, who had all performed at least 2,000 colonoscopies during their careers, were given access to an AI system that analyses colonoscopy images in real time and flags a type of precancerous intestinal lesion called an adenoma. The tool was available to the specialists on some days but not on others. Once physicians began using it, their performance dropped significantly whenever the system was unavailable. During the three-month period before the AI tool was introduced, the specialists found at least one adenoma during 28.4% of colonoscopies. During the three-month period after the tool was introduced, the adenoma detection rate for colonoscopies performed without AI assistance decreased to 22.4%. Gastroenterology and Hepatology, suggest that even highly skilled professionals might get worse at tasks that their job requires as they become more dependent on AI tools, says Robert Wachter, a physician at the University of California, San Francisco, who is the author of a book on how AI tools are transforming health care. The study authors say that continuous exposure to such tools can cause clinicians to become “less motivated, less focused, and less responsible when making cognitive decisions without AI assistance”. Co-author Yuichi Mori, a physician-researcher at the University of Oslo, says that more studies are needed to confirm the phenomenon. But people who use AI tools should be aware that they risk losing some of their skills, he adds. “There is no established solution against deskilling right now. It should be a very hot research topic in the next decade.”" https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-026-01947-1 #AI #Deskilling #Science #Medicine
Trust Metrics
98
Accuracy
82
Framing
70
Context
78
Tone
Accuracy98%
Framing82%
Context70%
Tone78%
Analysis Summary
Polish endoscopy specialists with 2,000+ procedures each saw their adenoma detection rates drop from 28.4% to 22.4% when the AI assistant became unavailable — a six-point decline that suggests heavy reliance on the tool atrophied their independent diagnostic skills within months. The study, reported in Nature, shows even highly trained physicians can lose capability in core competencies through dependence on real-time AI decision support, though researchers note more studies are needed and there's currently no known countermeasure. The finding raises a broader question for medical training: as AI tools become standard in clinics, how do you maintain physician proficiency for situations when the AI is offline, wrong, or unavailable?
Claims Analysis (5)
Polish endoscopy physicians who performed at least 2,000 colonoscopies showed adenoma detection rates of 28.4% before AI tool introduction, dropping to 22.4% during colonoscopies without AI after the tool became available.
Nature article explicitly reports these figures from the Polish study. The specific percentages and study design are directly cited.
Verified
Physicians' adenoma detection performance dropped significantly whenever the AI system was unavailable after they had access to it.
Nature article confirms the core finding that physician performance declined on procedures performed without AI assistance after becoming dependent on the tool.
Verified
The study suggests that continuous exposure to AI tools can cause clinicians to become 'less motivated, less focused, and less responsible when making cognitive decisions without AI assistance'.
Nature article quotes the study authors with this exact characterization of the mechanism.
Verified
Robert Wachter, a physician at UCSF and author of a book on AI in health care, characterizes the findings as showing how highly skilled professionals might get worse at required tasks through dependence on AI tools.
Nature article attributes this analysis to Wachter and confirms his UCSF affiliation and book authorship.
Verified
Yuichi Mori, a physician-researcher at the University of Oslo and co-author, says more studies are needed to confirm the phenomenon and that there is no established solution against deskilling.
Nature article directly quotes Mori and confirms his affiliation and role.
Verified
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