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Weekly Update
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March 22, 2025 |
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In a new JAMA+ AI Conversations, Dimitri Christakis, MD, MPH, Chief Health Officer at Special Olympics International and JAMA Pediatrics Editor in Chief, described how AI could improve health care for people with intellectual and developmental disabilities.
Also this week:
- A recent survey indicated that public trust in health care systems to use AI responsibly is low. In a JAMA Network Open Invited Commentary, the authors considered two possible futures as public attitudes evolve over time.
- A JAMA Neurology Review reported on computer vision technologies, which have the potential to change neurological practice by providing objective, quantitative measures of neurological signs.
- A randomized controlled trial published in JAMA Network Open found digitally supported and home-based physiotherapeutic scoliosis-specific exercise for patients with adolescent idiopathic scoliosis is more effective than a conventional intervention model.
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Medical News & Perspectives
JAMA
How AI Could Improve Health Care for People With Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities
Yulin Hswen, ScD, MPH; Nora Collins
INVITED COMMENTARY
JAMA Network Open
Trusting Health Care Systems to Use Artificial Intelligence
Jessica S. Ancker, MPH, PhD
REVIEW
JAMA Neurology
Computer Vision in Clinical Neurology: A Review
Maximilian U. Friedrich, MD; Samuel Relton, PhD; David Wong, PhD; et al
ORIGINAL INVESTIGATION
JAMA Network Open
Digital Physiotherapeutic Scoliosis-Specific Exercises for Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis: A Randomized Clinical Trial
Wangshu Yuan, MS; Weihong Shi, MS; Lixia Chen, MD; et al
AUDIO
AI’s Role in Advancing Equity for Individuals With Developmental Disabilities
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