this post was submitted on 28 Jul 2023
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The allergy, called alpha-gal syndrome, came to light a little over a decade ago.

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[–] troyunrau@lemmy.ca 10 points 1 year ago (11 children)

Interesting read. A few years ago I developed, seemingly overnight, an intolerance for red meat. Which sucked cause I really like it. But I developed it while working in the arctic, where there are no ticks (but like trillions of other biting insects). Doctors just did the usual rotation of antibiotics and then said IBS and patted themselves on the back. It was a terrible cop-out, but when living in the arctic you don't get much choice for doctors. Over time the problem largely tapered off and I'm no longer a firehose an hour after eating meat. I feel for anyone who gets this.

I'm hoping that AI really helps within the field of medicine. Doctors cannot be expected to know every possible cause of every illness -- they're human after all. But I'm hoping that the weird stuff can be detected and at least diagnosed properly.

I'm so mad at Elizabeth Holmes. Any startup in this space will face such an uphill battle.

[–] over_clox@lemmy.world 5 points 1 year ago (6 children)

I feel for you and anyone suffering with a meat allergy, but I dunno how much I'd trust AI for any serious purposes after seeing the garbage it can spit out.

Seriously, I've managed to get AI to write me instructions on how to inflate a phone and how to shave alligator hair. Rather that say "I'm sorry, that doesn't make any sense, but here are some related topics", instead it literally wrote out actual instructions for that nonsense LOL!

So yeah, I have no reason to trust AI for anything serious, it's about an ignorant joke of a language model is all it really adds up to.

[–] Empyreus@lemmy.world 9 points 1 year ago (1 children)

That's specifically for a LLM which would probably not be the best AI base for medical uses.

[–] apemint@kbin.social 4 points 1 year ago

People still don't understand that AI is an all encompassing term like "tool" and not a single thing.

Just like we use thousands of vastly different and specialized tools, in a decade we'll be surrounded by medical AI, engineering AI, accounting AI, design AI, research AI, life coaching AI, etc.

Right now we have a few LLMs and generative AIs, but that's like having a pen and a spray gun.
Of course you wouldn't ask any of them for a medical diagnosis.

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