Dr. Gary Brazina, orthopedic surgeon at Pacific Coast Sports Medicine, discusses how artificial intelligence could dampen efforts to provide individualistic care.
payment for performance mandates to practice in a certain way that is essentially cookbook medicine, one size fits all, which to my mind is the antithesis of good patient care. i wonder and a lot of americans i think are fearful of where our future doctors are going to come from. what is the mood of those who are now in medical school, just entering their president densecy, about this new world of medicine we re entering? well, the current round of residents by the way, very talented and very skilled are looking more towards having regular hours and a shift type of setup. and many are staying within the hospital system when they graduate. this is a turnaround. in the old days, people couldn t wait to graduate so they could go out into the world and set up their practice and practice the way they saw fit. that has stopped. now the majority of graduates of residency programs, that is, are deciding to take salaried positions within the hospital setting or in clinics run by the hos