E-bike and scooter crashes driving more brain injuries
medicalxpress - The growing use of electric bikes and scooters has caused a surge in brain and spine injuries among urban riders and pedestrians, a new study shows. Led by NYU Langone Health researchers, the study found that these injuries now account for nearly 7% of tr…
AI Summary: A new analysis links the rise of e‑bikes and scooters to a measurable increase in traumatic brain injuries and trauma admissions, accounting for roughly 7% of related cases in the examined data. Researchers urge better helmet uptake, infrastructure changes and policy action to curb preventable head injuries before cities regret their micro‑mobility love affair.
Should you really trust health advice from an AI chatbot?
bbc - Abi has had very mixed results when asking a chatbot for guidance about her health issues.
AI Summary: Recent analyses and a hospital study reveal mainstream AI chatbots frequently provide incorrect or misleading medical guidance and miss initial diagnoses, posing real patient‑safety risks. The research shows these systems can fabricate facts, overconfidently assert dubious recommendations and fail to flag uncertainty, prompting calls for clinician oversight, clearer warnings and tighter evaluation before trusting bots with health decisions.
- Chatbots misdiagnose and confidently give dangerous medical advice (4)
- Companies race to build clinical AI tools and invest heavily (4)
- Other AI healthcare stories: innovation, payers, workflows, mental health trials (12)
- Researchers demand proof and robust evaluation before clinical AI deployment (5)
- Utah pilots bold AI medical programs, sparking safety debates (3)
- All Other Stories
Chatbots misdiagnose and confidently give dangerous medical advice
Companies race to build clinical AI tools and invest heavily
Other AI healthcare stories: innovation, payers, workflows, mental health trials
Researchers demand proof and robust evaluation before clinical AI deployment
Utah pilots bold AI medical programs, sparking safety debates
All Other Stories
Florida surgeon charged with manslaughter after removing wrong organ
Mariah Taylor / beckershospitalreview - Thomas Shaknovsky, MD, a Florida surgeon, was charged April 13 with second-degree manslaughter in connection with the death of a 70-year-old man during surgery. The Alabama man was vacationing in Florida when he experienced severe pain on his left side, T…
AI Summary: A Florida surgeon has been criminally charged with manslaughter after allegedly removing the wrong organ during an operation that resulted in a patient’s death. Prosecutors say the error was catastrophic, triggering an investigation and renewed scrutiny of surgical safety protocols, oversight practices, and how a single clinical mistake escalates into a criminal case.
CMS showcases first wave of digital health tools as questions about 'last mile' of adoption remain
fiercehealthcare - On Thursday, Trump administration officials unveiled the first wave of health tech tools as part of a push to make medical records more accessible to Medicare patients.
AI Summary: CMS showcased its first wave of vetted digital health tools via a new "app store" designed to streamline interoperability and distribute standardized applications across health systems. The platform aims to make vetted digital tools easily discoverable, but adoption hurdles, governance questions, and real‑world integration challenges mean hospitals may be cautious before swapping PDFs for plug‑and‑play magic.
Mount Sinai, Anthem reach 3-year agreement
Elizabeth Casolo / beckershospitalreview - Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield in New York and New York City-based Mount Sinai Health System have established a three-year agreement, both organizations confirmed to Becker’s. The agreement includes hospitals, physicians and other providers. Mount Sinai sa…
AI Summary: Mount Sinai and Anthem reached a three‑year contract restoring in‑network coverage after negotiations, ending a period of uncertainty for patients and clinicians. The deal averts immediate network disruption and signals both sides' willingness to settle—proof that combat can end in compromise when hospitals and insurers remember patients actually use the services.
Baylor Scott & White Health Plan to exit Medicaid, individual markets; cut 321 jobs
Jakob Emerson / beckershospitalreview - Baylor Scott & White Health Plan said April 14 it will exit the Texas Medicaid managed care market and discontinue its individual marketplace plans, affecting roughly 225,000 members and eliminating 321 jobs statewide, according to the Dallas Morning News…
AI Summary: Baylor Scott & White announced it will leave Medicaid individual markets, a move that will shed hundreds of jobs and reshape coverage options for affected enrollees. The decision highlights ongoing financial pressures in public‑program participation and raises practical concerns about access continuity for people reliant on those plans.
Tenet CIO to retire at year end
Emily Olsen / healthcaredive - Paola Arbour will stay at Tenet on a part-time basis to provide transition and support services through early 2028.
AI Summary: Tenet announced its chief information officer will retire at year‑end, kicking off a leadership transition for a pivotal technology role. The departure forces succession planning and raises questions about continuity for key digital initiatives — the sort of timing CIOs love to call “strategic.”