May be in the West. However more practical countries like China with a huge population and clear incentive to provide healthcare to a large population at reduced cost will have incentives to balance accuracy and usefulness in a better way.
My personal opinion is that a lot of Medical professionals are simply gatekeeping at this point of time and using legal definitions to keep changing goalposts.
However this is a theme that will keep on repeating in all domains and I do feel that gradual change is better than sudden, disruptive change.
AI in healthcare is going to add so many layers of indirection for malpractice lawsuits. You'll spend years and lots of $$$ trying to figure out who the defendant would ultimately be, only for it to end up being a LLC that unfortunately just filed for bankruptcy.
The worry isn't that you'll find an AI sitting on the chair that a radiologist used to sit. It's that the entire field of radiology gets reduced down to a button click on a software.
The other doctors will still be there for you to sue.
So the question is, “what if people bought an x-ray machine (affordably available on Amazon)and started using it without training on radiological safety”?
Here in New Zealand you get a licence after purchasing the equipment, and require the machine spec, date of manufacture and serial number to get the licence.
It does require a radiologist name on the paperwork as they are the one with the radiation licence. However it is possible to get one if not a radiologist (dentists do, and radiographers have).
Being licensed to use the equipment is the hard bit, as insurance companies require accreditation which is hard to get.
Isn't that 90% of going to get scan is right now? You'll still need the "shop" to provide the equipment and the tech with the training to know what/where to scan, but you might get the results a bit faster? Are the radiologists the chokepoint now, or is it the techs?
That's the way it already works in many cases, just like with outpatient surgery clinics and other outpatient specialist practices. There is a critical difference, though, because radiology also has sub-specialities and someone focused on orthopedics probably isn't the one you'd want reading your cardiology images, nor would you want your ophthalmologic radiologist trying to diagnose a brain CT.