By what year will we have robot doctors who can scan you immediately to find cancer?
I've been let down for the last 7 months by human doctors, they've missed my cancer and now I'm going to die alone at home
>>8726339
You don't have cancer, pancreatic, liver or otherwise.
>>8726339
>By what year
It might take 40 years or so. If we're still alive.
Ignoring that meme of yours, human doctors are in fact horrible at their jobs.
Maybe in countries like the US they are forced to keep up with current research and follow protocol, but in my country they are quick to dissmiss anything that isn't blatantly obvious to be a common problem.
>>8726339
Ignore the memers, OP.
Sometimes pancreatic cancer can show symptoms in the lungs. It's a common human anatomical variety.
You should immediately seek medical assistance if you've had symptoms for this long.
>>8726378
He has done. He's been told by several doctors at this point that he doesn't have cancer. But because he's a hypocondriac, he just [math] knows [/math] that he's go cancer.
>>8726380
>But because he's a hypocondriac
Let me guess, 1st year med student, right?
Your time will come, big guy.
>>8726386
No this same faggot keeps showing up.
https://warosu.org/sci/thread/S8654469
https://warosu.org/sci/thread/S8497971
https://warosu.org/sci/thread/S8483248
https://warosu.org/sci/thread/S8666910
https://warosu.org/sci/thread/S8714523
https://warosu.org/sci/thread/S8512353
He has a mental illness, nothing else.
Robots will probably do worse at finding cancer than humans, OP. Tuning a visual processing algorithm so that it can detect a set of fuzzily defined criteria and distinguish cancer on a scan in a way that is specific and sensitive is fiendishly difficult. That same classification task, however, is something humans are innately good at.
>>8726339
>By what year will we have robot doctors who can scan you immediately to find cancer?
How would they "scan" people? You don't just get someone's image study and look for it without a clinical context, too many false positives
>/sci/ still falls for this bait
>>8726339
All of us are cancered inside, to some degree.
We alone can accept health and vitality.
Most choose sickness, accident, aging and finally death. They are the believers in everything. They believe they have to die, that it's inevitable: because an ignorant told them so.