• Entertainment AI Science The Pitt has a sharp take on AI HBO’s medical drama has been teasing out a smart story about what makes gen AI so tempting and concerning. Link Share Gift Entertainment AI Science The Pitt has a sharp take on AI HBO’s medical drama has been teasing out a smart story about what makes gen AI so tempting and concerning. Link Share Gift Each episode of HBO’sThe Pittfeatures some degree of medical trauma that almost makes the hospital drama feel like a horror series. • Some patients are dealing with gnarly lacerations while others are fighting off vicious blood infections that could rob them of their limbs, and the chaos of working in an emergency room often leavesThe Pitt’s central characters shaken. • But as alarming as many ofThe Pitt’s more gore-forward moments can be, what’s even more unsettling is the show’s slow-burning subplot about hospitals adopting generative artificial intelligence. • In its second season,The Pittonce again chronicles all the events that happen during a single 15-hour day shift in the Pittsburgh Trauma Medical Center’s emergency room. • Season two takes place on the Fourth of July - one of the busiest days for hospitals - as senior attending physician Dr. • Michael “Robby” Robinavitch (Noah Wyle) is working one last shift before he takes a much-needed sabbatical.

Article Summaries:

  • HBO’s medical drama The Pitt uses its second season to probe the growing use of generative AI in hospitals. Set on a single 15‑hour shift on July 4, the show follows senior attending Dr. Robby Robinavitch and new ER leader Dr. Baran Al‑Hashimi as they navigate a busy day. Al‑Hashimi pushes for AI‑powered transcription software to help residents like Dr. Trinity Santos keep up with charting, but a surgeon’s angry outburst after receiving a chart with glaring errors forces the characters to confront the technology’s fallibility. The episode balances the appeal of AI efficiency with a sober reminder that clinicians remain ultimately responsible for patient care.

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