The Pitt has a sharp take on AI
Briefly

The Pitt has a sharp take on AI
"Each episode of HBO's features 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 leaves 's central characters shaken. But as alarming as many of The Pitt 's more gore-forward moments can be, what's even more unsettling is the show's slow-burning subplot about hospitals adopting generative"
"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. With Dr. Robby scheduled to be away for three months, the hospital brings in Dr. Baran Al-Hashimi (Sepideh Moafi) to help lead the emergency room while he's away."
Season two follows a single 15-hour day shift at the Pittsburgh Trauma Medical Center's emergency room on the Fourth of July, one of the hospital's busiest days. The shift centers on senior attending physician Dr. Michael "Robby" Robinavitch working his last shift before a three-month sabbatical and the arrival of Dr. Baran Al-Hashimi to help lead the ER. The emergency room fills with patients suffering severe lacerations and blood infections, creating chaotic, trauma-heavy cases that leave central staff shaken. Second-year resident Dr. Trinity Santos struggles to see all patients and complete thorough charting. Dr. Al-Hashimi advocates adopting AI-powered transcription to speed charting despite its imperfections.
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