As of June 2026, General Internal Medicine Physicians has an AI-exposure score of 55/100 (Elevated exposure) on the AI-Safe Careers index, blending O*NET tasks, the Anthropic Economic Index, the Penn/OpenAI study, and BLS data. This is an estimate of task exposure, not a prediction of job loss.
General Internal Medicine Physicians
More exposed than 48% of the roles we track. Median pay ~US$256,560. About 2,100 projected openings a year (BLS 2024–34 — growth plus replacement).
Pay & demand figures are US medians (BLS, in USD) — your local figures will differ. Your exposure score applies broadly.
How you compare to similar Healthcare roles
Your tasks, by AI exposure
- Collect, record, and maintain patient information, such as medical history, reports, or examination results.
- Analyze records, reports, test results, or examination information to diagnose medical condition of patient.
- Explain procedures and discuss test results or prescribed treatments with patients.
- Direct and coordinate activities of nurses, students, assistants, specialists, therapists, and other medical staff.
- Provide consulting services to other doctors caring for patients with special or difficult problems.
- Treat internal disorders, such as hypertension, heart disease, diabetes, or problems of the lung, brain, kidney, or gastrointestinal tract.
- Prescribe or administer medication, therapy, and other specialized medical care to treat or prevent illness, disease, or injury.
- Refer patient to medical specialist or other practitioner when necessary.
- Plan, implement, or administer health programs in hospitals, businesses, or communities for prevention and treatment of injuries or illnesses.
- Operate on patients to remove, repair, or improve functioning of diseased or injured body parts and systems.
- Manage and treat common health problems, such as infections, influenza or pneumonia, as well as serious, chronic, and complex illnesses, in adolescents, adults, and the elderly.
- Immunize patients to protect them from preventable diseases.
- Prepare government or organizational reports on birth, death, and disease statistics, workforce evaluations, or the medical status of individuals.
- Monitor patients' conditions and progress and reevaluate treatments as necessary.
- Advise surgeon of a patient's risk status and recommend appropriate intervention to minimize risk.
- Make diagnoses when different illnesses occur together or in situations where the diagnosis may be obscure.
- Provide and manage long-term, comprehensive medical care, including diagnosis and nonsurgical treatment of diseases, for adult patients in an office or hospital.
- Advise patients and community members concerning diet, activity, hygiene, and disease prevention.
- Conduct research to develop or test medications, treatments, or procedures to prevent or control disease or injury.
No durable tasks identified for this role — its real, individually-assessed tasks consistently read as augmentable (89%).
Safer adjacent roles
Your AI-Safe Career Report
Every task scored with what to do about it · 5–10 safer roles with salary, demand & reachability · skill-gap map · a 30/60/90-day roadmap · plus a résumé & LinkedIn rewrite · PDF.
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Workers with AI skills earn a roughly 62% wage premium — adapting pays. — PwC Global AI Jobs Barometer, 2026
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