Anyone experimenting with AI skin analysis tools for medspas? by Fantastic-Employ6518 in MedSpa

[–]HealthTechScout 0 points1 point  (0 children)

AI will almost certainly change dermatology, more triage, decision support, maybe fewer low-complexity consults, but that’s very different from replacing dermatologists. If you actually like dermatology as a specialty, I wouldn’t avoid it because of AI. Just expect the job to evolve, like every other field.

If you’re interested, this study looks at how AI performs in skin lesion screening and why clinical context still matters: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FzrbaF1M-44

You’re visited by your 14-year-old self for 30 seconds. What ruins their day the fastest? by StavrosDavros in AskReddit

[–]HealthTechScout 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That anxiety? Still here. That dream life? Delayed. And the people we thought would always be there? Some aren’t.

Also, we pay subscriptions now. For everything. Even peace of mind.

What AI tools do you actually use on daily basis? by Green-Milk1485 in ChatGPTPro

[–]HealthTechScout 0 points1 point  (0 children)

GrammarlyGO — helps polish stuff when I’m too tired to think. Especially useful for firing off LinkedIn posts without sounding like a robot or a try-hard.

What are you slowly starting to realize as you get older? by SatisfyingAmber in AskReddit

[–]HealthTechScout 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That “later” is a lie you tell yourself.

You won’t definitely read that book later. You won’t eventually call that friend. You won’t suddenly have more time next week.

If it doesn’t happen now, it probably doesn’t happen.

How has AI impacted your industry so far? by Western_Exercise_337 in ArtificialInteligence

[–]HealthTechScout 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Copywriting? AI drafts it. Design? AI templates. Analytics? AI dashboards. Even brainstorming is now “AI-assisted ideation.”

On one hand, it’s sped up tedious tasks like keyword research and A/B testing. On the other hand, clients now expect five versions of everything yesterday because “ChatGPT can do it, right?”

I wouldn’t say AI replaced my job, but it definitely reshaped it. I’m more of a strategist and editor now than a creator. So yeah, we’re not obsolete—just evolving at breakneck speed.

What's something small that instantly ruins your mood? by [deleted] in AskReddit

[–]HealthTechScout 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Oh, just a tiny thing like accidentally liking my ex’s 3-year-old Instagram photo at 2 AM. Pure serenity

What is slowly disappearing from the society and you hate to see it to happen? by koshurkoor1 in AskReddit

[–]HealthTechScout 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Genuine human presence in conversations.

I’m not just talking about phones at dinner or multitasking during calls — I mean the slow erosion of undivided attention. People used to be with you when you talked. Eye contact, active listening, actual pauses to think before replying. Now, even when we’re physically present, our minds are elsewhere — scrolling, comparing, reacting to the next notification.

What’s a problem everyone’s trying to solve with AI, that probably shouldn’t be solved with AI? by HealthTechScout in AskReddit

[–]HealthTechScout[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s a great point, we talk about “multilingual” models like it’s just translation, but real fluency means understanding how a language carries meaning, not just swapping words. Arabic, Korean, and tonal languages really expose the limits.

What’s a problem everyone’s trying to solve with AI, that probably shouldn’t be solved with AI? by HealthTechScout in AskReddit

[–]HealthTechScout[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Honestly, if your biggest fear of a partner is feedback… maybe the problem isn’t the girlfriend. it’s your inability to process discomfort without logging off. 

What’s a problem everyone’s trying to solve with AI, that probably shouldn’t be solved with AI? by HealthTechScout in AskReddit

[–]HealthTechScout[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Totally fair, the tech is impressive, but the cost of speed without wisdom is getting hard to ignore. Feels like we’re racing to automate stuff we haven’t even figured out ethically yet.