this post was submitted on 14 Jan 2025
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The country has a dire shortage of nurses, so to fill the manpower gap, it’s using AI for preventive care.

  • By 2030, one in four people in Singapore will be over the age of 65.
  • Authorities see potential in AI tools to assist in preventive illness care.
  • An AI tool under development will use voice biomarkers to detect early signs of depression in seniors.
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[–] LovableSidekick@lemmy.world 3 points 7 hours ago* (last edited 7 hours ago)

If you're brutally honest you'll probably admit that you do most of your job on autopilot. Unless something interesting happens and you have to make a judgement call, the main thing is just getting through the day without screwing up. AI could almost do the routine parts already, and just nudge you as needed. It could probably do most office jobs that way. Employers will pretty soon realize they could run a 20-person department wtih AI and like 3 consultants to put out occasional fires. This will spread more and more to production jobs as industrial automation catches up. But what does an economy do with all the employees it suddenly doesn't need? I know the cliche that the goal of capitalism is to make money without employees, but without a certain critical mass of people getting wages they can spend, oligarchs can't rake in profits and governments can't rake in taxes. So at that point how do we make the economy work? I think that's a conversation we'll be having sooner than we think, and it's better if we have it before the proverbial shit hits the proverbial fan.