Patients are split on getting health care from artificial intelligence

About 52% of participants in a new study would choose a human doctor rather than AI for diagnosis and treatment.

Artificial intelligence-powered medical treatment options are on the rise and have the potential to improve diagnostic accuracy.

The findings in PLOS Digital Health, however, show that most patients aren’t convinced the diagnoses provided by AI are as trustworthy as those delivered by human medical professionals.

“While many patients appear resistant to the use of AI, accuracy of information, nudges, and a listening patient experience may help increase acceptance,” says Marvin J. Slepian, professor of medicine at the University of Arizona College of Medicine-Tucson, of the study’s other primary finding: that a human touch can help clinical practices use AI to their advantage and earn patients’ trust.

“To ensure that the benefits of AI are secured in clinical practice, future research on best methods of physician incorporation and patient decision making is required.”

For the study, the researchers placed participants into scenarios as mock patients and asked whether they would prefer to have an AI system or a physical doctor for diagnosis and treatment, and under what circumstances.

In the first phase, the researchers conducted structured interviews with actual patients, testing their reactions to current and future AI technologies. In the second phase of the study, the researchers polled 2,472 participants across diverse ethnic, racial, and socioeconomic groups using a blinded, randomized survey that tested eight variables.

Overall, participants were almost evenly split, with more than 52% choosing human doctors as a preference versus approximately 47% choosing an AI diagnostic method. If study participants were prompted that their primary care physicians felt AI was superior and helpful as an adjunct to diagnosis or otherwise nudged to consider AI as good, the acceptance of AI by study participants on re-questioning increased. This signaled the significance of the human physician in guiding a patient’s decision.

Disease severity—leukemia versus sleep apnea—did not affect participants’ trust in AI. Compared to white participants, Black participants selected AI less often and Native Americans selected it more often. Older participants were less likely to choose AI, as were those who self-identified as politically conservative or viewed religion as important.

The racial, ethnic, and social disparities identified suggest that differing groups will warrant specific sensitivity and attention as to informing them as to the value and utility of AI to enhance diagnoses.

“I really feel this study has the import for national reach. It will guide many future studies and clinical translational decisions even now,” Slepian says. “The onus will be on physicians and others in health care to ensure that information that resides in AI systems is accurate, and to continue to maintain and enhance the accuracy of AI systems as they will play an increasing role in the future of health care.”

Additional coauthors are from the University of Texas at Arlington, the James E. Rogers College of Law, the University of Utah, and the University of Arizona.

The National Institutes of Health funded the study.

Source: University of Arizona

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Target holds 'emergency' meeting over LGBTQ merchandise in some stores to avoid ‘Bud Light situation’

FIRST ON FOX – Some southern Target stores were forced by the corporation to move LGBTQ Pride merchandise away from the front of their locations after customer “outrage” to avoid a “Bud Light situation.”

Many Target locations across the country feature massive June Pride month displays on an annual basis, with items this year ranging from “tuck friendly” bathing suits for transgender people to mugs that say “gender fluid.” But the retail juggernaut has been criticized by some conservatives for the displays, with children’s items particularly irking many customers. 

A Target insider told Fox News Digital that many locations, mostly in rural areas of the south, have relocated Pride sections to avoid the kind of backlash Bud Light has received in recent weeks after using a transgender influencer in a promotional campaign. 

CONSUMERS CREEPED OUT BY TARGET’S ‘TUCK-FRIENDLY’ WOMEN’S SWIMWEAR: ‘SHOPPING ELSEWHERE’

Target in Palmdale, California

Some southern Target stores were forced by the liberal corporation to move LGBTQ Pride merchandise away from the front of the store after customer “outrage.” (Google Maps)

A Target insider said there were “emergency” calls on Friday and some managers and district senior directors were told to tamp down the Pride sections immediately. 

“We were given 36 hours, told to take all of our Pride stuff, the entire section, and move it into a section that’s a third the size. From the front of the store to the back of the store, you can’t have anything on mannequins and no large signage,” the Target insider said. 

“We call our customers ‘guests,’ there is outrage on their part. This year it is just exponentially more than any other year,” the Target insider continued. “I think given the current situation with Bud Light, the company is terrified of a Bud Light situation.” 

The insider, who has worked at the retailer for almost two decades, said Target rarely makes such hasty decisions. They said Friday’s call began with roughly 10 minutes on “how to deal with team member safety” because of the amount of backlash the Pride merchandise has generated, noting that Target Asset Protect & Corporate Security teams were present on the call. 

Pride swimsuit

Target Pride swimsuits boast “tuck-friendly construction” and “extra crotch coverage,” presumably to accommodate male genitalia, even if they are made in an otherwise female style. (Brian Flood/Fox News)

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Many Target locations across the country feature massive June Pride month displays on an annual basis. (Brian Flood/Fox News)

“The call was super quick, it was 15 minutes. The first 10 minutes was about how to keep your team safe and not having to advocate for Target. The last five was, ‘Move this to the back, take down the mannequins and remove the signage,’” the insider said, noting that bathing suits have replaced Pride merchandise in front-of-store displays despite Pride month not even starting until June 1. 

“It’s all under the guise of trying to increase swim sales,” the insider said. “Everyone was like, ‘Thank God,’ because we’re all on the front lines dealing with it.” 

Target did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

BUD LIGHT IN ‘SERIOUS TROUBLE’ OF LOSING STATUS AS TOP-SELLING BEER IN US, INDUSTRY EXPERT WARNS

Fox News Digital has confirmed rural Target stores in South Carolina, Arkansas and Georgia are among the locations to move the Pride sections. Most rank-and-file employees were left in the dark, with many not knowing the Pride sections would be moved until they noticed it themselves. 

Pride merchandise remains prominently displayed at other locations and on the Target website.  

Target Pride merchandise includes female-style swimsuits that can be used to “tuck” male genitalia. Some products are also labeled as “Thoughtfully fit on multiple body types and gender expressions.” 

Pride merchandise also includes onesies and rompers for newborn babies, a variety of adult clothing with slogans such as “Super Queer,” party supplies, home décor, multiple books and a “Grow At Your Own Pace” saucer planter. 

INFLUENTIAL TRANS CARE DOCTOR ONCE WARNED PUBERTY BLOCKERS COULD CAUSE PERMANENT SEXUAL DYSFUNCTION

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Target has been criticized by conservatives for the over-the-top Pride displays, with children’s items particularly irking many customers.  (Brian Flood/Fox News)

TARGET-PRIDE-COLLECTION-MUGS

Target Pride merchandise includes “Gender Fluid” mugs and “Grown At Your Own Pace” saucer planters.  (Brian Flood/Fox News)

Bud Light sales have plummeted since backlash to the infamous partnership with transgender activist Dylan Mulvaney continues to haunt the company more than a month since it came to light. The issue began when Mulvaney publicized that the beer company sent packs of Bud Light featuring the influencer’s face as a way to celebrate a full year of “girlhood.” Mulvaney is one of many social media influencers Bud Light has tapped to promote the brand.

Mulvaney said the cans were her “most prized possession” on Instagram with a post that featured “#budlightpartner.” A video then featured Mulvaney in a bathtub drinking a Bud Light beer as part of the campaign. Some consumers mistakenly thought the cans with Mulvaney’s face were being sold to the public.

“Bud Light learned an important lesson about wading into the culture wars recently. But partnering with Dylan Mulvaney is nothing compared to what Target is doing,” conservative pundit and author Bethany Mandel tweeted. 

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Fox News’ Hanna Panreck contributed to this report. 

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Jeff Bridges' tumor has shrunk 'to the size of a marble'



CNN
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Jeff Bridges is a survivor.

So far the actor has beat both advanced cancer and a severe case of Covid-19.

In a new cover story for AARP magazine, Bridges said he was on a pandemic break from his series “The Old Man” when he “was doing some exercises while on the ground and felt what seemed like a bone in my stomach.”

His wife Susan Geston suggested that he get checked out, he said, but Bridges was hesitant to go to the doctor’s because he wasn’t in pain.

“I’m hiking and feeling great. My shins really itch, and I think, Oh, I just got, you know, dry skin,” Bridges recalled. “Then I had night sweats, but thought, That’s just hot summer nights. It turns out those are lymphoma symptoms.”

The 73-year-old now says he had a 9-by-12-inch tumor which he began chemotherapy treatment to battle.

Then Covid hit him hard (in part because the chemo had wiped out his immune system) which led to a five-week hospitalization.

“Cancer was nothing compared to the Covid,” he said.

Initially, Bridges said, he was willing to accept that he was old and dying. Then he began to lean into the stoicism he learned portraying Dan Chase, his role as a former CIA operative on “The Old Man.”

“For me, in that hospital bed, the obstacle was death. And that was the way. I kept thinking, Here’s the problem, you know? Here’s the challenge,” he said. “I asked myself, ‘How are you going to go about it?’ And I thought, I’m a dancer, man, and I’m a musician. I’m going to jam with this situation, you know?”

Now, Bridges said, his tumor has shrunk “to the size of a marble,” he’s recovered from Covid and filming Season 2 of “The Old Man.”

“I didn’t think I’d ever work again, really,” he recalled. “So at first I said, ‘Well, we’ll see.’ But eventually that became, ‘Maybe I can.’ I have to admit that I was still frightened of going back to work. Then I began to think of my recovery as a gift being presented.”

FX’s “The Old Man” is streaming on Hulu.

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