Iyad Sultan, Pediatric Oncologist and Chief Health Informatics Officer at King Hussein Cancer Center, posted on LinkedIn:
“Today we completed the final session of our Prompt Engineering and Clinical AI course – part of the Master of Science in Cancer Care Informatics at King Hussein Cancer Center and the University of Jordan.
We closed with Ethics of AI in Healthcare. A fitting end.
The students in this program will practice in a world where AI is already embedded in clinical workflows. That is not a future scenario – it is today’s reality. What they do with it matters.
The case for optimism is real: well-designed AI tools, used by practitioners who understand their limits, can make care safer for patients. The challenge is equally real: the same tools, misunderstood or misapplied, add risk to an already complex environment and place new demands on clinical staff.
This course was built on the belief that the practitioner who understands how these systems work – and where they fail – is better equipped than one who simply uses them. Whether that holds will depend on how this generation chooses to engage.
Proud of our students. Grateful to my colleagues at KHCC and UoJ who made this program possible.”
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