Worcester Medicine - Winter 2023

Page 24

A.I. In Medicine

WORCESTER MEDICINE

As I See It Continued AI in ways that increase health equity and ensure that the application of these technologies supports the patient-provider connection, enhances our interprofessional engagement and relationships, removes bias, and ensures that we are serving all populations of patients with ethical advocacy. + Sonia Nagy Chimienti, MD FIDSA, Senior Associate Dean for Medical Education Dartmouth’s Geisel School of Medicine *IAMSE Fall 2023 Webcast Audio Seminar Series 1. “An Introduction to Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning with Applications in Healthcare”, presented by H. Valafar, University of South Carolina 2. “Artificial Intelligence: Preparing for the Next Paradigm Shift in Medical Education”, presented by C. James and E. Otles, University of Michigan 3. “Transforming Healthcare Together: Empowering Health Professionals to Address Bias in the Rapidly Evolving AI-Driven Landscape”, presented by S. Bessias, Duke University School of Medicine, and M.P. Cary Jr, Duke School of Nursing 4. “AI Tools for Medical Educators”, V. Capaldi, D. Kurzweil, and E. Steinbach, Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences 5. “ChatGPT and Other AI Tools for Medicine and Medical Education”, presented by B. Hersh, Oregon Health & Science University.

Compassionate addiction treatment close to home. If you or a loved one is struggling with addiction, contact an AdCare Hospital representative at

1-800-ALCOHOL

24

Winter 2023

LEGAL CONSULT: Financial Transparency Comes Close to Home Peter J. Martin, Esq. Aastha Sharma, Esq.

W

e live in an era rife with reports of financial skullduggery—from the Panama Papers, through Bernie Madoff and now the FTX revelations—where money laundering, fraud, and other forms of criminal behavior have led to much outrage and some regulation. For the most part, the response has been to impose greater levels of transparency on the “malefactors of great wealth.” For small and medium-sized enterprises, including medical and other health care practices, these efforts have been of some interest but of little practical import. Not anymore. The new Corporate Transparency Act (CTA) and its accompanying regulations will impose ownership disclosure obligations on even the smallest practices, beginning January 1, 2024. Owners of these practices can be forgiven if they greet this news with less than overwhelming enthusiasm, but as a practical matter the new requirements are not onerous. However, the penalties for non-compliance are severe and there are nuances that may make compliance difficult in some circumstances. Basically, the CTA requires most privately owned corporations, LLCs and other entities, to file a Beneficial Ownership Interest, or “BOI Report” with the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (“FinCEN”) of the U. S. Department of the Treasury which includes certain information about the entity’s “beneficial owners.” Beneficial owners include persons who hold at least 25% of the ownership interests in the organization, or who otherwise exercise “substantial control” over the entity. The information to be provided about each beneficial owner is the individual’s name, date of birth, residential or business address, and an identification number from a source such as a driver’s license. There are a number of exemptions, which if applicable, will provide the entity respite from having to file the BOI Report. However, most of the exemptions are for entities that file reports with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) or other regulatory authorities such as publicly traded companies, banks, credit unions, money services


Articles inside

UMass Memorial Health

1min
page 28

In Memoriam - Edward Amaral, MD

2min
page 27

In Memoriam - Christopher Linden, MD

3min
page 27

Book Review - The Masters of Medicine by Andrew Lam, MD

3min
page 26

Legal Consult

6min
pages 24-25

AdCare Hospital

1min
page 24

As I See It

5min
pages 23-24

Is it Time to Rethink How We Teach the Art of the Clinical Interview? A Medical Student Posits the Use of AI to Drill Doctoring and Clinial Skills

5min
page 22

Artificial Intellegence in Nursing

6min
pages 20-21

The Quest for Childhood Injury Prevention - Embodied in Safety Quest

5min
pages 19-20

Cartoon

1min
page 18

Artificial Intelligence in Health Professions Education

5min
pages 17-18

Physicians Insurance

1min
page 16

Pixels, Patterns, and Patients: Radiology Residency in the AI Revolution

5min
pages 15-16

Digital Inclusion of Elderly People: Designing a purposeful serious game interface with memorable music

5min
pages 14-15

Can AI be a Good Doctor?: What measuring a computer's medical ability teaches us about human doctors

6min
pages 12-13

Do Patients Want Artificial Intelligence or Human Intelligence?

5min
pages 11-12

AI Infographic

1min
page 10

AI in Healthcare: Balancing Innovation with Regulation

7min
pages 9-10

Artificial Intelligence in Mental Healthcare: A Story of Hope and Hazard

7min
pages 7-8

Annual Cottle Lecture - The Age of Artificial Intelligence in Medicine

1min
page 7

Music Worcester

1min
page 6

The Doctor Will See You Now

6min
page 5

Editorial

3min
page 4

Reliant Medical Group

1min
page 2
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