[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":-1},["ShallowReactive",2],{"exercise-947":3},{"payload":4,"id":45,"user":46,"level":52,"course":53,"activity":54,"activity_slug":55,"title":6,"topic":56,"tone":57,"stats":58,"created":61,"score":62,"is_favorite":63,"public":64,"is_external":63},{"text":5,"title":6,"answers":7,"questions":38},"Walk into a modern hospital and you’ll see miracles everywhere: tiny cameras exploring arteries, robots assisting surgeons, and apps that can send your heart rhythm to a doctor in seconds. It’s hard not to feel excited about how far medicine has come. Yet behind the impressive technology, doctors, patients and families are facing ethical questions that are just as complex as the science.\n\nOne of the biggest changes is how much information medicine can now produce. Genetic tests can reveal whether someone has a higher risk of developing certain diseases, sometimes decades before any symptoms appear. For some people, this knowledge feels empowering: they can change their lifestyle, plan their future, or start early monitoring. For others, it creates anxiety and a sense of being labelled as “ill” before they are actually ill. There is also the question of who should have access to this information. If an employer or insurance company knew your genetic risks, would they treat you fairly?\n\nAnother area full of promise—and debate—is artificial intelligence. Hospitals are increasingly using AI to help read scans, predict which patients might get worse, and even suggest treatments. Supporters argue that AI can reduce human error and speed up decisions in busy emergency departments. But critics worry about over-reliance on systems that may be biased or difficult to understand. If an AI recommends a treatment that later harms a patient, who is responsible: the doctor, the hospital, or the company that built the software?\n\nEnd-of-life care raises equally powerful questions. Modern machines can keep a body alive for a long time, even when recovery is unlikely. Families may disagree about what their loved one would have wanted, and doctors may struggle to balance compassion with realism. Some patients ask for every possible intervention, while others prefer comfort-focused care. In many countries, debates about assisted dying add another layer, forcing society to consider where personal choice ends and medical responsibility begins.\n\nEthics also appears in everyday decisions about fairness. New treatments can be extremely expensive, and hospitals do not have unlimited budgets. When a drug costs thousands per month, should it be offered to everyone who might benefit, or only to those most likely to respond? During health crises, such as pandemics, these questions become urgent: if there are not enough intensive care beds, how should doctors decide who receives one?\n\nWhat makes these dilemmas so fascinating is that there are rarely perfect answers. Modern medicine is not only about curing disease; it is also about protecting dignity, privacy and trust. The most inspiring part is that patients are increasingly included in these conversations. When medicine combines brilliant innovation with thoughtful ethics, it doesn’t just extend life—it improves the way we live it.","The New Bedside Dilemmas",{"1":8,"2":13,"3":18,"4":23,"5":28,"6":33},[9,10,11,12],"Ethical challenges grow alongside scientific progress, not behind it.","Ethical questions only matter when technology fails.","Hospitals mainly focus on machines rather than people.","Technology has removed most moral uncertainty from healthcare.",[14,15,16,17],"They mainly help doctors, not patients.","They can make people feel like patients long before any illness appears.","They always predict exactly which disease someone will get.","They are illegal in most countries, so people fear punishment.",[19,20,21,22],"They might use genetic risk information in ways that lead to unfair treatment.","They are required to pay for all genetic testing.","They usually ignore medical data completely.","They can cure genetic diseases if they have enough data.",[24,25,26,27],"AI cannot be used in emergency departments.","It can be unclear who should be accountable if an AI-driven recommendation causes harm.","AI will soon replace all doctors, which is ethically unacceptable.","AI systems always make faster decisions than doctors in every situation.",[29,30,31,32],"Only private hospitals face problems with treatment costs.","Expensive drugs are never effective, so they should not be offered.","Limited budgets can force difficult choices about who gets costly medicines.","Hospitals can easily increase budgets by charging more for appointments.",[34,35,36,37],"Ethics is mostly a legal issue and should be left to courts.","The best healthcare pairs innovation with careful attention to dignity, privacy and trust.","Patients should not be involved in ethical discussions because they lack expertise.","Medical progress is exciting, so ethical debates slow it down unnecessarily.",{"1":39,"2":40,"3":41,"4":42,"5":43,"6":44},"What does the writer suggest about the relationship between medical technology and ethical questions?","Why might genetic test results be troubling for some people, according to the text?","What concern does the writer raise about employers or insurance companies?","What is one ethical difficulty connected to using AI in hospitals?","In the section on fairness, what problem does the writer highlight about new treatments?","Overall, what is the writer’s main message about ethical issues in modern medicine?",947,{"id":47,"username":48,"first_name":49,"last_name":50,"image":51},23948,"harley-davidson","Harley","Davidson","https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/a/ACg8ocJD0KETXvAHpaISIfOtHmvNQSo2JhJOkmYOleW8KnChRvrtStjD=s96-c","B2","Reading","Long Text","long-text","Create an exercise about the ethical issues in modern medicine","Enthusiastic",{"times_played":59,"num_favorites":60},2,1,"2026-05-23T18:12:51",null,false,true]