The Future is Here: Medical graduates need to be ready for digital health.

Digital technology has long been an important part of effective health-care delivery, evolving steadily to support clinical practice. In recent years, digital health has become central to improving efficiency, quality, safety, and accuracy across clinical processes. Advances in artificial intelligence (AI), combined with other digital technologies are creating both new opportunities and challenges that medical graduates must be prepared for. Opportunities include improved diagnostic accuracy, greater precision in personalised treatment plans, enhanced clinical decision support, streamlined record-keeping, and more efficient administrative processes. At the same time, AI is empowering patients with greater knowledge about both routine and complex health issues, enabling them to take a more active role in decision-making. To support their active engagement, many patients increasingly expect doctors to be proficient in these rapidly emerging digital health technologies that include AI, health apps, telemedicine, wearable devices, and other remote assessment tools.

Authors: Brett Sumner, Rebecca Grainger

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He Ara Kaunuku: a Pathway Towards Digital Excellence in Aotearoa