Beyond the bustle of medical school classes and socialising, Aaron Fanous spent his free time reading up on artificial intelligence (AI) and computer science. Balancing it all was an undertaking, but in addition to medicine heās always had an interest in technology.
āI saw how influential software was in the medical world, and a lot of context was missing from it,ā Mr Fanous said. āThe reality is, technology will come into medicine ā it will be in most fieldsĀ ā and knowing what can be done with it will open so many doors to improving the entire system as a whole. Thatās too big to ignore.ā
Mr Fanous is one of the first students enrolled in the University of Texas at San Antonioās new dual-degree medical programme, which was launched last week. It is among the first in the nation to combine artificial intelligence with medicine.
The programme comes as many universities are pouring money into AI, with someĀ Ā on initiatives to equip students with what many believe will be critical skills for the future.
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Interest in AIās impact on medicine has ramped up recently, with researchers citing potential benefits in treating, diagnosing and caring for patients.
āThere has been a lot of conversation everywhere about AI and, in particular, the large language model,ā said Alison Whelan, chief academic officer at the Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC).
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AAMC informally surveyed its members this summer, asking their thoughts on AIās intersection with the medical world and what AAMC could do to help its members. āWith AI, it was ādo what you always do, but maybe accelerate it since this is happening rapidlyā,āĀ Dr Whelan said.
Several universities across the nation have begun integrating AI into medical practice. Medical schools at the University of Florida, the University of Illinois, the University of Alabama at Birmingham and Stanford and Harvard Universities all offer variations of a certificate in AI in medicine that is largely geared toward existing professionals.
āI think schools are looking at āhow do we integrate and teach the uses of AI?āā Dr Whelan said. āAnd, in general, when there is an innovation you want to integrate it into the curriculum at the right pace.ā
In the new dual-degree programme at UT San Antonio, medical students will spend four years on the UT Health side and one year on the UT San Antonio side, ultimately earning a doctor of medicine degree and a masterās of science degree in artificial intelligence. Students can choose a concentration in computer science, data analytics or autonomous systems.
āItās more than just adapting to change; our programme empowers physicians to lead the conversation on how AI can be used in healthcare,ā said Dhireesha Kudithipudi, director of UTSAās Matrix AI Consortium. āIf physicians are not in the centre of this conversation, then the solutionĀ might not really be harnessing the full potential of AI or wonāt be holistic. So bringing them to the centre and giving them the power to lead is what this programme is trying to do.ā
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The programme, roughly four years in the making, started taking shape long before last yearās boom of generative AIĀ such as ChatGPT made the technology a household name. Professor Kudithipudi is overseeing the programme from the UT San Antonio side, while Ronald Rodriguez, professor of urology at UT San Antonio, is overseeing the programme from the UT Health side.
āWe didnāt recognise how quickly the world would become interested in AI, but it came together nicely,ā Dr Rodriguez said. HeĀ added that AI had been on his radar since 1980, when he took a computer course during his freshman year at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. āI got really fascinated by it and thought it would be a great tool to have for scientific research and a variety of applications.ā
Dr RodriguezĀ said he hoped to grow the UT programme to roughly 15 students in the next few years.
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āWe said āletās look at this as if we were starting from zeroĀ ā how would we approach it?āĀ We realised we needed to start earlier, with medical students, not postgraduates,ā he said. He added that he hoped the programmeĀ wouldĀ be a model, helping other universities overcome the challenges of combining two degrees from separate colleges.
Professor Kudithipudi said the programmeĀ could also help the overall research community, building bridges between the technical and medical sides that have long been siloed. She said the programme could expand internally as well, pointing to interest from UTSAās dental school.
āI think this is only the beginning; thereās a lot to explore here, and I truly believe the solutions weāre trying to build as engineers or computer scientistsĀ might not be holistic in a lot of cases,ā Professor Kudithipudi said. āWe donāt want physicians to come in at the end point; we want them to lead or be engaged in the process very early.ā
This is an edited version of a story that first appeared on
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