The use of decision support tools and automation in medical practice is not new. Early tools employed simple regression models to reduce heterogeneity and offer more structured care. In cardiology, initial examples of decision support tools included the Framingham risk scores for primary prevention risk stratification and automated sliding scale dose adjustments for heparin or warfarin. Since then, automation processes have become more sophisticated and are now widespread in many routine aspects of medical practice. In cardiology, these include automated […]