All of us who have practiced emergency medicine, or medicine in the emergency department in countries where this specialty doesn’t exist, have seen this kind of patient. Good for her that she was not critically ill, but her constellation of symptoms and signs are suitable for a MGH case presentation in the NEJM.
All of us who have practiced emergency medicine, or medicine in the emergency department in countries where this specialty doesn’t exist, have seen this kind of patient. Good for her that she was not critically ill, but her constellation of symptoms and signs are suitable for a MGH case presentation in the NEJM.
Getting the right diagnosis is a Sherlock Holmes / Dr House challenge. The patient is way beyond of what we frequently see in practice.
What about using AI in order to get the differential diagnosis and reach the right one?
Having the right diagnosis would help her understand what really happens and how to mitigate it if there is no definitive cure.
Of course, all patients are bodies and souls and we as a practitioners have to treat both. There are no illnesses but patients.
All of us who have practiced emergency medicine, or medicine in the emergency department in countries where this specialty doesn’t exist, have seen this kind of patient. Good for her that she was not critically ill, but her constellation of symptoms and signs are suitable for a MGH case presentation in the NEJM.
Getting the right diagnosis is a Sherlock Holmes / Dr House challenge. The patient is way beyond of what we frequently see in practice.
What about using AI in order to get the differential diagnosis and reach the right one?
Having the right diagnosis would help her understand what really happens and how to mitigate it if there is no definitive cure.
Of course, all patients are bodies and souls and we as a practitioners have to treat both. There are no illnesses but patients.