Trường Đại học Phan Châu Trinh
Trường Đại học Phan Châu Trinh
Tuyển Sinh Đại Học
TUYỂN SINH 2026
Kết nối Zalo tư vấn:

Liên hệ tuyển sinh

Gửi email cho chúng tôi:
Gọi hoặc Zalo cho chúng tôi:
Gửi hồ sơ về:
09 Nguyễn Gia Thiều, P. Điện Bàn Đông, TP. Đà Nẵng.

Hợp tác Quốc tế

Mọi thắc mắc liên quan đến hợp tác quốc tế hoặc Chương trình Thực tập Quốc tế cho sinh viên, vui lòng liên hệ với chúng tôi qua email:
Theo dõi chúng tôi trên mạng xã hội
Theo dõi chúng tôi trên phương tiện truyền thông xã hội để không bỏ lỡ thông tin quan trọng về đăng ký, học bổng, cơ hội nghề nghiệp hấp dẫn và trải nghiệm đa dạng trong các hoạt động của chúng tôi.

JAMA + AI Weekly Update MAY 9, 2026

Trouble viewing this email? Read it Online

Alt content
Advertisement
JAMA AI masthead

Weekly Update

May 9, 2026

What does it mean for health policy and population health decisions when AI now sits at the table? JAMA and JAMA+ AI Associate Editor Yulin Hswen, ScD, MPH, and JAMA Health Forum Editor in Chief Sandro Galea, MD, DrPH, consider studies that trace AI’s swift transition from abstract concept to embedded tool.

Their discussion centers on how policy shifts and evolving health service structures intersect with technical innovations, such as AI scribes and decision algorithms. The editors reflect on the balance between optimism and caution as these new technologies enter widespread use.

Listen now on Spotify | Apple Podcasts | YouTube | JAMA.com.

Editor’s Picks in this week’s JAMA+ AI:   

  • Digital media use, particularly social media, is associated with small but consistent declines in mental health and development across youth, comparable to risks like poor diet or insufficient sleep. This is the conclusion of a meta-analysis published in JAMA Pediatrics of 150+ longitudinal studies tracking over 363,000 participants across multiple developmental domains. (JAMA Pediatrics)

  • Pediatric AI adoption faces unique clinical, ethical, and validation challenges due to children’s developmental vulnerabilities and limited advocacy. The authors argue for a "child‑in‑the‑loop" approach that balances timely deployment of validated tools with family‑centered consent, communication, and shared decision‑making. (JAMA Pediatrics)

  • Longitudinal studies suggest a U-shaped relationship between social media use and adolescent well-being: heavy use poses risks in early adolescence, while abstinence in late adolescence, especially for boys, is also associated with lower well-being. This pattern favors age targeted strategies, such as delayed account crreation and limits for younger teens, over blanket bans. (JAMA Pediatrics)

Multimedia

JAMA

AI at the Policy Table

Yulin Hswen, ScD, MPH

ORIGINAL INVESTIGATION

JAMA Pediatrics

Digital Media Use and Child Health and Development: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

Samantha Teague, PhD; Klaire Somoray, PhD; Adrian Shatte, PhD; et al

Viewpoint

JAMA Pediatrics

Speed and Safety in Pediatric Artificial Intelligence—Child in the Loop

Ryan M. McAdams, MD; Wissam Shalish, MD, PhD

Comment and Response

JAMA Pediatrics

Adolescent Mental Health and Social Media

Matthew H. Soldano, BS; Chase M. Goldberg, BS; Mill Etienne, MD, MPH

AUDIO

AI at the Policy Table

See the whole story. Subscribe to JAMA Network on YouTube.

JAMA Network signature

Thank you for subscribing to JAMA Network email alerts. This message was sent to buiduytam1@gmail.com by updates@email.jamanetwork.com.

To update your contact information, change your email preferences, or unsubscribe, click here.

To ensure you always receive JAMA Network emails, add the email address updates@email.jamanetwork.com to your address book.

To unsubscribe by mail, contact:

JAMA Network
AMA Plaza
330 N Wabash Ave
Chicago, IL 60611
Or call (800) 621-8335.

facebook icon twitter icon linked in icon pinterest icon youtube icon instagram icon

©2026 American Medical Association. All rights reserved.
 

Advertisement