Behind every data scientist and entrepreneur celebrating the powers and potential of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance modern healthcare, there is a silent majority who are more circumspect. Of course, big data and disruptive technologies in healthcare are not new. Medical providers and the public have grown familiar, and even comfortable, with computer-aided triage when calling NHS 111; electronic health records; and robotic surgery and scans interpreted at first pass by an algorithm. Big data and AI assistance are needed to meet the UK’s health demands and ambitions, and the government is investing in this future. Trusts can now bid for a share of £21m from the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) to accelerate rollout of promising AI tools to mark the NHS’ 75th birthday.1 “NHS data is a phenomenal resource that can revolutionise healthcare, research and the life sciences,” writes Ben Goldacre in The Goldacre Review, commissioned by the DHSC in 2021. But he cont
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