Asked by Wolf Haley
How does cell technology affect government?
New government agencies must be created to fund and regulate each type of technology.
A new technology may reduce the amount of money that a hospital needs to operate.
Discoveries that are made through cell technology sometimes result in new regulations.
New cell technologies might reduce the number of government health-care agencies.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
Likely answers:
1. False — Governments do not have to create an entirely new agency for every new technology. Existing agencies (e.g., health regulators, research funders) are usually given new rules, offices, guidance, or budgets to handle emerging tech. (Sometimes a new office is created inside an existing agency rather than a brand‑new agency.)
2. True — A new cell technology can reduce hospital operating costs (for example, by shortening stays, replacing expensive procedures, enabling outpatient treatments, or automating lab work), although up‑front costs and reimbursement issues can offset savings.
3. True — Discoveries from cell technologies often lead to new or updated regulations and guidance (for example, rules for stem cell research, gene editing, or cell‑therapy approval pathways).
4. False — New cell technologies are more likely to change the roles and rules of existing health agencies or prompt new oversight functions than to reduce the number of agencies; consolidation of agencies is uncommon as a direct result of new medical technologies.
1. False — Governments do not have to create an entirely new agency for every new technology. Existing agencies (e.g., health regulators, research funders) are usually given new rules, offices, guidance, or budgets to handle emerging tech. (Sometimes a new office is created inside an existing agency rather than a brand‑new agency.)
2. True — A new cell technology can reduce hospital operating costs (for example, by shortening stays, replacing expensive procedures, enabling outpatient treatments, or automating lab work), although up‑front costs and reimbursement issues can offset savings.
3. True — Discoveries from cell technologies often lead to new or updated regulations and guidance (for example, rules for stem cell research, gene editing, or cell‑therapy approval pathways).
4. False — New cell technologies are more likely to change the roles and rules of existing health agencies or prompt new oversight functions than to reduce the number of agencies; consolidation of agencies is uncommon as a direct result of new medical technologies.
Submit Your Answer
We prioritize human answers over AI answers.
If you are human, and you can answer this question, please submit your answer.