General practice in the United States faces increasing mental demands that make it hard to provide the best care. Primary care doctors often handle complex patient problems and many administrative tasks. This leads to mental tiredness and slows down their work. These problems are worse after hours, when there are fewer staff and resources, but more urgent cases. Studies show that American GPs have similar system problems as doctors in other countries, such as dealing with many complex patients and extra paperwork.
The mental strain on GPs often causes slower decisions, possible mistakes in diagnosis, and unhappy patients. Fixing these issues is important to make healthcare better and keep doctors working well. Tools that help with decisions and improve work flow can reduce pressure and give doctors more time to spend with patients, which leads to better care.
NAOMI (Neural Assistant for Optimized Medical Interactions) is a project that combines artificial intelligence with clinical decision-making. It was tested using 80 practice patient consultations and uses GPT-4 technology to help with triage, diagnosis, and reasoning. NAOMI is designed to help general doctors handle many tasks during patient visits.
The project was done by researchers including Timothy Hor, Lee Fong, Katie Wynne, and Bert Verhoeven. Their work was published by Elsevier Ltd. in the journal Technovation. They showed that NAOMI works well with many different clinical cases. It helps doctors make better diagnoses and triage decisions while lowering their mental workload.
In 80 simulated patient visits, NAOMI was tested on a variety of cases, from simple problems to complex ones with many symptoms. The study showed important results for U.S. clinics:
These results are important for medical managers and IT staff who want to improve healthcare services and worker satisfaction in U.S. clinics.
Administrators and owners in the U.S. must balance quality patient care with smooth operations. Rules, payment policies, and patient needs are changing, adding more paperwork and tasks for healthcare workers. AI tools like NAOMI can help in many ways.
Some benefits for administrators are:
IT managers can use AI systems that fit with current work flows and do not require big changes to existing computer setups. Transparent AI also means doctors need less training and use the tools more easily.
AI can improve clinical work by automating routine tasks. In general practice, many repeated and admin duties take up much time that could be spent on patients. AI-based automation has clear benefits:
The high mental load on doctors affects fairness in healthcare and the strength of the workforce. In rural and underserved U.S. communities, few primary care doctors and hard after-hours coverage make access difficult. AI tools like NAOMI can help by:
Also, with fewer primary care doctors available in the U.S., AI tools will be important to keep care quality good even when there are fewer human doctors.
AI-based clinical decision support systems like NAOMI have shown promise in practice sessions for lowering doctors’ mental work and improving care speed and quality. For U.S. general practices, using these tools can help deal with challenges like after-hours care, complex patients, and heavy paperwork.
Administrators, owners, and IT managers in medical practices should think carefully about how AI decision tools and workflow automation could make operations better, increase doctor satisfaction, and improve patient care. Using AI tools that focus on full data analysis, clear explanations, and changing risk evaluations can strengthen primary care and support better healthcare for communities across the country.
GPs face increasing cognitive demands, particularly after-hours and in resource-constrained settings, due to urgent decision-making, administrative burdens, and complex patient cases.
NAOMI is an AI-based clinical decision support agent using GPT-4 designed to assist GPs with triage, diagnosis, and decision-making to reduce cognitive overload.
A design science approach was applied, involving 80 simulated patient consultations and clinician feedback to test NAOMI’s effectiveness in clinical support.
They are Comprehensive Data Collection and Analysis, Clinical Reasoning Transparency, and Adaptive Triage and Risk Assessment to support decision-making and workflow integration.
It allows the AI to gather and process complete patient data, enhancing diagnostic precision and supporting informed clinical decisions by providing relevant insights.
Transparency builds trust by explaining AI decision processes clearly, enabling clinicians to understand, verify, and confidently integrate AI recommendations into their workflow.
It dynamically prioritizes patient care based on evolving clinical information, optimizing long-term resource allocation and focusing attention where most needed.
Effectiveness was assessed through 80 simulated patient consultations representing diverse real-world cases, alongside feedback from practicing clinicians.
GPs worldwide face cognitive overload due to administrative tasks, patient complexity, urgent care demands, and resource limitations, which AI can help mitigate.
AI can improve GP efficiency, decision-making quality, equity in healthcare delivery, and address systemic workforce challenges by optimizing clinical workflows.