Lemuel Non, MD
banner
lemuelnonmd.bsky.social
Lemuel Non, MD
@lemuelnonmd.bsky.social
540 followers 1.2K following 22 posts
Transplant ID doc. AI enthusiast. Finding ways of using genAI to boost efficiency in clinical medicine.
Posts Media Videos Starter Packs
Pinned
First, make sure the search option is on or else it will use its outdated pretrained data.

Type your question, then voila!

Check the content. Check the references.

Here's a quick video:
If you have a kid who wants to talk to Santa, try the #chatgpt Santa voice.

My toddler was so happy when he found out he was still on Santa's nice list. He also learned a lot about his reindeer and all things #Christmas

Happy holidays!

Check it out:
3️⃣ Extract key info from documents

Here I uploaded a Word document and asked a couple of questions from it.

#medsky #medicine #medicinesky #IDsky
2️⃣ Create quizzes from various file types.

Here I used an Excel file to create a flashcard-type quiz.

#medsky #medicine #medicinesky #IDsky
2/4
1️⃣ Interpret clinical images.

Here I asked it to create PowerPoint bullet points based on a life cycle picture I got from the CDC website:

#medsky #meded #mededsky #medicine #IDsky
1/4
2 years ago, text-based LLMs already amazed us. Now, they’ve gone multimodal. They are now able to process and generate various file types.

Here are some ways you can use Multimodal-LLMs (like #chatgpt) in #MedEd:
I'm a user as well and I love it!
Do you use an AI scribe? Which one?
Patient satisfaction was higher with AI-generated responses than clinician-generated responses in this study:

jamanetwork.com/journals/jam...

Satisfaction may be attributed to the longer responses by AI (in addition to better quality and empathy in some cases).

#medsky #medicine
Reposted by Lemuel Non, MD
🆕️🔥Article @thetxidjournal.bsky.social
Not Just an Oxymoron: The Utilitarian's Guide to Antimicrobial Stewardship in Transplant Infectious Diseases
Table ✨️2: TID ASP opportunities & initiatives
#idsky #medsky #Txid
onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10....
Just remember, AI is only a tool. If you're not comfortable with it, don't use it. And clinicians are not the only ones using it - patients do too. It is our job to be one step ahead, and actually make sure the info that reaches them is accurate.
If you have to provide pages and pages of info, then that is a terrible handout. I imagine checking that would definitely be laborious. Thankfully, the info that I give are something I'm very familiar with and are usually short. AI just converts them into a very easy-to-understand version.
Lastly, the current clinician-AI model that we should aspire to have is to be a "co-pilot" with AI. I don't think it is ever safe to rely completely on AI.
Also, I might add that the patient info that we usually give to our patients are from built-in handouts in the system. Many of these handouts can be outdated themselves, and we do not have handouts for every info that we need. This is where AI could help.
Hallucinations are far less with the new models, plus the "search" feature is not based on pretrained data, but rather on real-time web surfing and summarizing. But agree, physicians who have no time to check info should not use this. I check mine all the time.
Google also has a similar AI summary that's included in its search result, but it's not available in the mobile version.

So I think chatgpt wins this one because you can work on the output right away.
Then using your prompting skills, convert it into a patient handout.

Here's how:
First, make sure the search option is on or else it will use its outdated pretrained data.

Type your question, then voila!

Check the content. Check the references.

Here's a quick video:
Have you tried the new #ChatGPT search?

It could be a powerful tool for generating handouts for your patients.

Here's how:

#meded #mededsky #medicine #medicinesky #IDsky