It could be argued that the healing relationship model is outdated, as “the notion of patients placing themselves under the care of a doctor and seeking their expert advice has moved to the concept of patients as producing health knowledges and as acquiring expert knowledge so as to manage their illness themselves.” This characterisation of medicine suggests that the doctor-patient relationship has evolved and can seamlessly incorporate AI without altering the character of medical care.

As the practice of medicine changes in the face of emerging technologies, “something of the past is inevitably lost, not always for the worse.” Medicine has long been affected by advances in technology that disrupt the traditional one-to-one, face-to-face model of clinical care between doctor and patient. The Internet, for example, has empowered patients with greater access to medical information, but introduced risks owing to misleading or inaccurate information. Introducing new stakeholders into care relationships is not self-evidently problematic, but must be measured in terms of impact on the healing relationship and the ends of medicine; in other words, in the impact on patient care.

The healing relationship must be understood as an idealistic framework of the relationship between ‘expert’ doctors and ‘vulnerable’ patients. As an ideal, the model is not reflective of the ‘empowered patient’ model of care that has emerged in parallel over the past several decades. Assuming modern medicine is characterised by ‘empowered’ patients eroding the privileged position of doctors as ‘experts’, trust cannot be assumed to exist whenever healing occurs.