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George Ikkos's avatar

Fair summary of issues

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Alex Mendelsohn's avatar

“The strategy of ordering an investigation only when clinical suspicion exists fails to diagnose many patients who should be diagnosed. Furthermore, clinicians working in resource depleted contexts are incentivized to use as few investigations as possible, and over time clinicians internalize these rationing judgments as clinical judgments.”

While in many cases there may not seem to be a reason to order further tests on a clinical basis, I think there is a case for research purposes. In physics there are quite a few open datasets that any researcher can go into and explore (e.g. CERN particle physics dataset: https://opendata.cern.ch/)

Is there something similar in psychiatry?

Machine learning for data analysis, for instance, requires a lot of data to be trained (I mean loads! ChatGPT was trained using ~500 GB of text data or 300 billion words). Just in case there are any tech bros. reading this with too much money, funding of psychosis tests would be very welcome…

Also, around 10 percent of the interesting observations I made in the materials science lab were by complete accident. So, there is semi-significant chance more testing will yield non-psychosis related advances.

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