HEALTH
AI Video Generators: Changing Healthcare, Yet More to Consider
California, USA, San Francisco,Wed Jan 22 2025
If doctors could customize educational videos for each patient or if medical students could train with realistic, personalized scenarios. That’s what artificial intelligence (AI)–driven video generators like Sora Turbo from OpenAI and Veo 2 from Google are promising. Announced in December 2024, these advanced platforms can create high-quality videos from text descriptions.
Healthcare is one area where these tools could make a big impact. Patient education could become more tailored, with videos explaining complex procedures in simple, personalized ways. Medical training might also get a boost, offering trainees realistic, varied scenarios to practice on. Even telemedicine could benefit, with doctors and patients able to see and understand each other's situations better through generated videos.
We looked at 41 studies between 2020 and 2024 and found lots of potential uses. Patients could get better explanations, medical training could be more standardized, and remote consultations could improve. But there are challenges too. Misinformation, called deepfakes, and privacy issues are real concerns. Ethical dilemmas and questions about how real these videos can seem also need addressing.
Right now, tools to spot deepfakes and rules around these videos’ use aren’t where they need to be. We need more research and better policies. In the future, these AI generators might allow real-time healthcare visualizations or augmented reality training. But first, we need to make sure everyone has access, so no one gets left behind.
If we can tackle these issues and work together, AI video generators could really transform healthcare. They could make it more effective, fair, and innovative while keeping misuse in check.
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questions
How does the use of AI-generated videos affect the quality of care in remote or underserved areas?
Imagine if AI-generated videos started giving too much bedside manner—could it make patients feel too comfortable?
Could AI-generated videos become the next viral sensation, with doctors dancing to popular songs while giving medical advice?
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