this post was submitted on 01 Nov 2023
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Technology

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[–] [email protected] 39 points 1 year ago (5 children)

Uhhh, they trained their AI on only 18 women with diabetes? This can’t be done correctly.

[–] [email protected] 29 points 1 year ago (2 children)

It's bullshit. It's the typical mixture of overly ambitious scientists and clickbait driven media.

Remember the 200 cures for cancer last year?

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Yup, total bullshit. When I got to:

Kaufman hopes it will “transform how the medical community screens for diabetes”.

I started to lose faith that there was anything of interest there. For those who don't know, "how the medical community screens for diabetes" currently is to...draw blood. Like, that's literally it. You fast overnight, go to the doctor's office, get blood taken, and the next day you learn if you're diabetic. If your doctor is really fancy, they may do the thing where they take blood once, then ask you to drink some ungodly sickeningly sweet glucose potion and take blood a second time so they can see how your body responds. But that's about the extent of it.

The authors are making it sound like you currently have to hike through the Himalayas to get a diagnosis now. No, you just take blood. It's fast. It's cheap. It's easy. And it's just about 100% accurate.

I can see that something like this could come up in some niche situations where someone's very remote and it's better than nothing, but "transform how the medical community screens for diabetes" overall is pretty laughable.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago

Just to play devil's advocate here: what you're describing is not a screening. A screening means, testing a large percentage of the population with a cheap and easy method, accepting a large amount of false positives. So _in principle _ this could be a screening test. But given the ease of the actual test, as you described, this point is kind of moot.

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