The rapid integration of large language models into clinical medicine raises ethical, philosophical, and existential questions that extend beyond traditional concerns about patient safety and data privacy. These artificial intelligence systems now perform clinical tasks such as diagnostic reasoning, protocol selection, and patient communication at levels comparable to trained physicians, yet the frameworks governing their deployment remain anchored in an era when machines could not convincingly simulate human understanding. The ethical implications of incorporating large language models into healthcare are examined through the lens of historical precedent, the physician-patient relationship, and the evolving meaning of human agency in clinical care. Drawing on examples from organ transplantation, intensive care medicine, and genetic engineering, medicine has repeatedly absorbed technologies that challenged foundational ethical assumptions, and each such absorption required the development of new governance frameworks rather than the rejection of the technology itself. Three critical tensions specific to large language models emerge: the gap between linguistic competence and genuine understanding, the redistribution of clinical authority from physicians to algorithms, and the erosion of empathy as a uniquely human contribution to healing. Ethical integration of large language models into medicine requires not only the application of existing bioethical principles but also the development of new frameworks that address the unprecedented capacity of these systems to inhabit the communicative and relational spaces previously reserved for human clinicians.
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Thomas F Heston (Sun,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69df2c9ee4eeef8a2a6b1d4f — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19558022
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Thomas F Heston
University of Washington
Washington State University
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