EXPOSURE TO AI
38%
MODERATE
OBSERVED IN REAL USE · Anthropic 2026
0%
of this role’s work is already showing up in real Claude usage (Anthropic Economic Index).
A co-pilot is coming for the busywork, not the wheel.
38% of this role’s O*NET tasks are within reach of today’s AI. That is the core-weighted exposure score from Eloundou et al. 2023 (“GPTs are GPTs”). It measures a capability ceiling, not a headcount forecast. In the blast radius. A real slice of the work is already automatable. The rest isn’t.
WHAT AI CAN ALREADY DO
- Maintain documentation of all patients' contacts, reviewing and updating records as necessary
- Counsel women regarding the nutritional requirements of pregnancy
- Provide patients with contraceptive and family planning information
- Inform patients of how to prepare and supply birth sites
- Recommend the use of vitamin and mineral supplements to enhance the health of patients and children
WHAT IT STILL CAN’T
- Monitor maternal condition during labor by checking vital signs, monitoring uterine contractions, or performing physical examinations
- Provide necessary medical care for infants at birth, including emergency care such as resuscitation
- Monitor fetal growth and well-being through heartbeat detection, body measurement, and palpation
- Set up or monitor the administration of oxygen or medications
- Suture perineal lacerations
THE HONEST PART. A percentage is not a pink slip. High exposure usually means a role shrinks and shifts toward judgment, direction and responsibility: the parts a model can’t sign its name to. Exposure ≠ displacement. Breathe.
"My job is 38% cooked. What’s yours?"
SOURCES: O*NET 30.3 occupational tasks · Eloundou et al. 2023 (“GPTs are GPTs”,
arXiv:2303.10130) · Anthropic Economic Index 2026 (CC-BY) |
how this is calculated |
last updated 2026-07-16