AI across the healthcare sector
AI is entering healthcare through multiple channels simultaneously. In clinical diagnostics: AI analysis of medical imaging (radiology, pathology, ophthalmology, dermatology) now matches or exceeds human specialist performance in specific narrow tasks. In administrative healthcare: appointment scheduling, prior authorisation, clinical documentation, and discharge letter generation are increasingly automated. In drug discovery: AI is dramatically shortening the time from target identification to candidate compound in pharmaceutical research. In patient management: predictive tools identify high-risk patients for early intervention, reducing avoidable admissions.
The NHS is investing significantly in AI tools as a means to address the productivity gap created by workforce shortages. AI is positioned as a way to do more with existing clinical staff rather than a replacement — though the medium-term workforce implications are more complex than this framing suggests.
Healthcare roles and their AI exposure
Most protected: nursing (irreducibly hands-on and relational — see the nursing article); primary care and generalist medicine (relational, holistic, and complex); mental health (fundamentally relational); physiotherapy and occupational therapy (physical and relational); surgery (physical dexterity, real-time judgment). Most affected: radiologists and pathologists in routine image reading (AI assistance is changing the skill mix required); clinical coding and medical records (increasingly automated); GP administrative functions (referral letters, sick notes, repeat prescription management — AI tools are substantially automating these). Growing roles: clinical informatics, healthcare data science, digital health product management, AI clinical safety officer roles (required by emerging NHS AI governance frameworks).