根据下面资料,回答36-40题
Matt Hancock, the new health and social care secretary, is right that technology has great potential to improve the quality of our health care—and save money into the bargain. But it won't be a panacea, and it raises a number of issues our society must deal with now.
AI poses clear ethical challenges. Until recently, patients would go to a doctor, explain their symptoms and the doctor would attempt to provide a diagnosis. But increasingly, patients now arrive having done their research online, all set to suggest on a diagnosis, to which the medic has to respond. Doctors tell that this game of catch-up and partial role-reversal is already skewing the relationship of trust. In addition to this, we now have algorithm-based diagnostics. This means medical knowledge is no longer based on what the doctor themselves has studied and learned.
Algorithms can support decision-making by medical professionals, and often outperform the doctor. We are seeing this with cancer detection, and other fields where close observation of the patient data can create much more precise and personalised medicine, and provide earlier diagnosis. The analysis of an individual's touch strokes on their mobile phone could show up Parkinson's because their texting speed decreases over time.
As we start to see these possibilities as fantastic rather than fantastical, we must also be aware of unintended consequences. What impact would doctors increasingly coming to rely on algorithms have on the body of medical knowledge? And how do we mitigate the risk that algorithms may not be sufficiently sensitive to everything going on in a patient's life? For example, a patient with a high level of anxiety and stress may suffer an impact that no machine is able to capture. Algorithms will also have to be assessed to ensure they are not biased against certain groups, especially as they make decisions which may have very long-lasting consequences on individuals.
There are lots of challenges ahead for AI. The trickiest is getting the ethics right. Machines are machines and we must not humanise them. When we bring them in, it must be to enhance our humanity—and this can only be done if both patients and doctors are engaged to help shape the future of medicine.
It can be learned from the first paragraph that
A technology is not a remedy for all difficulties.
B Matt Hancock is a renowned tech enthusiast.
C technology raises many difficult problems.
D Matt Hancock holds technology is all-powerful.