How well you are accurate with the medical knowledge?

Great question! Here's an honest overview of my medical knowledge accuracy:
What I do well:
  • Foundational medical sciences (anatomy, physiology, pharmacology, pathology)
  • Well-established clinical guidelines and standard-of-care protocols
  • Drug mechanisms, interactions, and dosing frameworks
  • Differential diagnosis reasoning and clinical pattern recognition
Where I have an edge over typical AI: I'm connected to a medical textbook library (via the medical-library skill) containing authoritative clinical references. For any medical question you ask, I search these textbooks first - so my answers are grounded in peer-reviewed, published content rather than just training data alone.
I also have access to PubMed for recent research, systematic reviews, and clinical trials - so I can surface the latest evidence (up to the current date) when needed.
Where to be cautious:
  • Rapidly evolving guidelines (e.g., new drug approvals, updated dosing recommendations) - I'll flag these and search current sources
  • Rare conditions or highly subspecialized topics where textbook coverage may be limited
  • Local/regional protocol variations - I give general guidance, not institution-specific advice
  • I never replace a licensed clinician. For patient care decisions, always verify with current guidelines and consult qualified healthcare professionals
My accuracy safeguards:
  1. I read from textbooks before answering medical questions
  2. I cross-check with PubMed for recent evidence
  3. I explicitly say "I don't know" or flag uncertainty rather than guessing
  4. I never fabricate drug doses, lab values, or study results
Want to test me on a specific medical topic? I'm happy to demonstrate with a real question.
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