Jobs considered most secure from AI automation include skilled tradespeople, healthcare professionals, strategic decision-makers, creative professionals, and emergency responders. These roles require hands-on expertise, problem-solving, human empathy, decision-making, creativity, and quick thinking, which are currently difficult for AI to replicate.
Strategic decision-makers are less vulnerable to AI because their roles involve complex problem-solving, weighing risks and benefits, and making decisions that steer organizations toward success. While AI can provide data-driven insights and assist in analysis, the nuanced understanding of business dynamics, stakeholder interests, and long-term vision are uniquely human attributes safeguarding these jobs from automation.
AI technologies in healthcare currently assist in diagnostics, patient monitoring, and robotic surgeries. They help with data-driven insights, analysis, and decision-making. AI also plays a role in precision medicine, creating personalized treatment plans based on individual factors such as medical history, environmental factors, lifestyles, and genetic makeup4.