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A few years ago, I was convinced that I was about to die. While I was not (a warning spoiler), I was not my severe health concern and my ability to assume that the worst has always continued. But the increase in smart devices that follow health and new methods that try to artificial intelligence. Understanding our bodies data led me to make an important decision. For peace of mind, Amnesty International needs to stay away from my personal health. January after Samsung DischargeI am more convinced than ever. I will explain.
At some point around 2016, I had a severe migraine for a few weeks. My anxiety increased sharply during this period due to the accompanying anxiety, and when I finally contacted the NHS auxiliary line in the UK and explained the various mysusals, they told me that I need to go to the nearest hospital and see it within two hours. “I walk there with someone, I remember them clearly telling me,” It will be faster than getting an ambulance for you. “
This call confirmed my worst fee – that death was imminent.
As it turned out, my fears were not basis to the eternal disappearance. The reason was in reality the severe muscle strain of overcoming multiple heavy cameras around my neck for a full day while filming a friend’s wedding. But the auxiliary line agent was simply working on the limited data I provided, and as a result, they have truly taken – a “better than sorry” approach and urged me to request immediate medical attention, just if I am really at risk.
Samsung’s health tracking provides a lot of data, which may or not be useful to you.
I spent most of my great life struggling with healthy anxiety, and I have taught me a lot of my ability to jump to the worst absolute conclusions despite the lack of real evidence to support them. Ringing in my ears? The brain tumor should be. The tingling in my stomach? Well, it is better to get my affairs in order.
I have learned to live with this over the years, and while I still have a climb and a decline, I know the best stirring things for me. To anyone, I learned never To Google my symptoms. Because regardless of my presentation, cancer was always One of the possibilities that the research is looking for. Medical sites-including the NHS website-did not provide a comfort and usually only lead to panic attacks in breaking the mind.
Unfortunately, I found that I have a similar response to many health tracking tools. I liked Apple Watch at the beginning, and her ability to read the heart rate during exercises was useful. Then I found that I was increasingly checking it all over the day. Then the suspicion infiltrated: “Why is the heart rate high when I am sitting? Is this normal? I will try again in 5 minutes.” When it was not different (or worse), the panic will have naturally.
I used Apple watches several times, but I find that the heart rate tracks more tired than useful.
Whether it follows the heart rate, blood oxygen levels or even sleeping levels, I feel the subject of what the “natural” range should have and at any time my data is outside this range, I suppose immediately that I was about to get to know the right there and then. The more data provided by these devices, the more things I felt I had to worry about. I learned to keep my fears in the Gulf and continue to use smart watches, without being a big problem for my mental health (I should not use any heart -related functions such as ECGS), but artificial intelligence -based sanitary ware.
During the keywords that were unloaded in January, Samsung talked about how the new Galaxy AI – Jimini AI to help us from Google – in our daily life. The Samsung Health algorithms will track the heart rate when fluctuating throughout the day, and learn you with changes. It will provide custom visions of your diet and exercise to help cardiovascular health and you can even ask AI’s agent questions related to your health.
For many, it might seem to be a wonderful comprehensive vision of your health, but not mine. For me, it seems to me that more data collected and painting in front of me, forcing me to recognize it and create an endless reaction ring of obsession, anxiety and panic. But artificial intelligence questions are the largest red sign for me. Artificial intelligence tools, by their nature, must make answers “the best guess” usually depend on the information available to the public online. Asking a question from artificial intelligence is just a quick way to run Google Search, and as I found, Googling Health Information does not end well for me.
Samsung has shown different ways AI will be used in its healthy application during the unpopular keyword.
It is very similar to the NHS phone operator, which unintentionally caused a state of panic, and the artificial intelligence -based health assistant will be able to provide answers that depend only on the limited information that it has about me. Asking a question about the health of my heart can raise a variety of information, just as with a healthy website about the reason I have a headache. But it is very similar to how headache He can Technically, it is a symptom of cancer, and it is likely to be muscle. Or I did not drink enough water. Or I need to look away from my screen a little. Or I should not stay awake until two in the morning. Or a hundred other reasons, all of which are much more vulnerable than the reasons you already decided is definitely the perpetrator.
But will you give me artificial intelligence, the context I need is not anxious and obsessed? Or will it only provide me everyone The possibilities as a way to try to give a full understanding, but instead feed that “what if” worry? Like the way I asked for an Officer of Amnesty International from Google to eat glue on the pizza, will the Amnesty International Health tool achieve online and provide me with a division of an answer, with inaccurate conclusions that can activate my anxiety in the full attack area?
Or perhaps, like the wonderful doctor in the hospital on that day who gently smiled at the man who is crying, he is already sitting in front of him and who has already formulated a note of his family on his phone in the waiting room, the AI tool may be able to see this data and say simply, “You are fine, stop worrying and go to sleep.”
Perhaps one day this will be the case. Health tracking tools and artificial intelligence visions may be able to provide a dose that affects the need for logic and reassurance to face my anxiety, instead of being the reason for this. But until then, it is not risking to want to take it.