The ICU won't be spared, in my opinion. Indeed, I anticipate earlier consolidation in critical care medicine than emergency medicine.
In my hospital, there are currently three CCM attendings daily. This is unnecessary and wasteful. There needs to be one attending (perhaps remote) supervising residents or midlevels. I am expendable immediately.
I spend most of my clinical time in a MICU and less time in a SICU (both with trainees). Especially in the MICU, current LLMs (eg Gemini) are equivalent or better the majority of the time than my meat brain. I have not been asked a question, in recent memory, by a resident that couldn't be more accurately and more deeply answered by LLMs.
My current usefulness is mostly in just three areas; two of which will be assumed by AI soon (5-10 years):
1. Patter recognition requiring vision and sometimes hearing or palpation. Most clinical diagnosis is pattern recognition, obviously...but most of that is based upon quantifiable objective data already analyzed superiorly by LLMs and similar algorithm-based models. The remaining subset of pattern recognition to which I am referring here, requires 'senses' -- which is waiting for optimization of 'real-world AI' (think Tesla autonomous driving with only cameras and neural nets). Currently, I am better than AI, residents, and -- I claim with cock-sure attitude reflected here -- most critical care attendings at determining need for intubation, readiness for extubation, and indentification of rare but obvious diagnoses with "typical presentation" (eg aortic dissection extending to the carotids often mistaken for embolic ischemic stroke). Other examples are available with moments of thought. All of my "superiority" will be replaced by real-world AI within 10 years effectively; though Luddites may briefly delay implementation at the expense of life and prosperity. I am an analytical betting man, but I never bet against human stupidity.
2. Procedures. I am trained in emergency medicine and critical care medicine. Not general surgery or related subspecialties. Within my fields of expertise, it is easy to train midlevels and residents/fellows to be better than me with my 10+ years of experience. I speculate, based upon already publicly demonstrated humanoid robotics and brain-computer interface demonstrations, that all EM and CCM procedures will be performed better by machines in 10 years. This is actually the cutting edge, in my opinion. The blend of humanoid robotics and real-world AI is more complex than "AGI". The reason my assertion with which I started this post (that my usefulness, and that of all other EM and CCM attendings, will be eliminated within 5-10 years) has such a uncertain range (ie 5-10 years) is not my doubt in AI; but rather the assimilation of real-world AI and humanoid robotics.
3. Palliative care. Human touch. Love and ****.
Respectfully to
@Mount Asclepius @Apollyon @xaelia @Zweihander @Steve_Zissou @Nutmeg @vector2 @nimbus @sylvanthus @CCM-MD,
HH