Rasha Aboelhassan, Senior Oncology Consultant at Nasser Institute Hospital, shared a post on LinkedIn:
“How much should we depend on AI as an oncologist?
As a physician, I’ve always believed that growth means learning new tools—but never at the expense of core skills.
AI is becoming part of our daily practice, and we must learn how to use it.
But this paper was a wake-up call:
It shows that repeated reliance on AI can quietly erode our clinical judgment and independent thinking.
while AI improves efficiency and short-term performance, it may also contribute to clinical deskilling—the gradual erosion of our diagnostic reasoning and independent judgment.
For me, the message is clear:
AI should support our decisions—not replace the way we think.
Because the real risk is not that AI makes mistakes…
It’s that one day, we stop noticing them.”
Title: Artificial intelligence in medicine: a scoping review of the risk of deskilling and loss of expertise among physicians
Authors: Pierre E. Heudel, H. Crochet, Q. Filori, T. Bachelot, J.Y. Blay
Read the Full Article on ESMO Real World Data and Digital Oncology

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