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Article
Generative AI in Health Care and Liability Risks for Physicians and Safety Concerns for Patients
JAMA
  • Mindy Duffourc, Penn State Dickinson Law
  • Sara Gerke
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
7-6-2023
Citation Information
Generative artificial intelligence (AI) is a quickly emerging subfield of AI that can be trained with large data sets to create realistic images, videos, text, sound, 3-dimensional models, virtual environments, and even drug compounds. It has gained more attention recently as chatbots such as OpenAI’s ChatGPT or Google’s Bard display impressive performance in understanding and generating natural language text. Generative AI is being heralded in the medical field for its potential to ease the long-lamented burden of medical documentation by generating visit notes, treatment codes, and medical summaries. Physicians and patients might also turn to generative AI to answer medical questions about symptoms, treatment recommendations, or potential diagnoses.1 While these tools may improve patient care, the liability implications of using AI to generate health information are still in flux. To date, no court in the United States has considered the question of liability for medical injuries caused by relying on AI-generated information.