Medical students in Fiji are reportedly submitting AI-generated assignments
Photo:
Supplied
In Fiji, medical students are reportedly using artificial intelligence (AI) to produce assignments, causing concerns among health educators in the country.
Fiji's health system is facing an increasing array of problems, including an
exodus of qualified personnel
, dilapidated infrastructure and shortages of medical supplies [ https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/pacific/557785/cleaning-and-reusing-fiji-doctors-forced-to-recycle-medical-products].
The Fijian government has declared the health sector as one of its "most urgent priorities",
allocating
more than FJ$611 million (approximately NZ$451m) in the 2025/2026 Budget last month.
In May, the Fiji College of General Practitioners president called on the country's medical professionals to embrace AI
"wisely and ethically"
.
Last year, the Fiji National University's College of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences (CMNHS) assistant professor Hemanth Lakshmikantha
told
a symposium that AI's "advantages are substantial" and that it "represents a transformative leap forward" in the medical field.
The CMNHS has been providing education for future health professionals of Fiji and other Pacific Island nations for several decades.
But this week, the head of the College told a conference that AI also poses a new challenge: medical students turning to it to complete assignments.
Dr Amelia Turagabeci said AI technology has changed how future medical professionals are approaching their studies, according to a
Fiji Sun
report.
"AI has come into effect where students can submit things that are AI developed, not really what they have actually done or developed on their own," she was quoted as saying.
"We can actually read that, particularly for those of us that actually try and be in power with whatever is developing."
Turagabeci is calling on health educators "to be a step ahead" of the students to identify AI-generated work and adapt their assessment methods.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

RNZ News
2 hours ago
- RNZ News
The business of playing for neurodiverse kids
Mac and Maria Pouniu, the owners and founders of Spectroom Photo: Misinformation v1 Mac and Maria Pouniu couldn't take their autistic son Mattias to a playground without feeling overwhelmed and judged by onlookers. Instead of staying at home, isolated and alone, the couple decided to take a negative experience and turn it into something positive - a play centre for kids like their son. About five years later, standing amidst the delightful chaos of a busy Wednesday morning, Poinui tells The Detail that Spectroom is more than just a play zone. It's a safe space where children with different disabilities - not just autism - can be themselves in an environment designed to let them play freely. "A lot of our kids have grown up in that environment where they have very limited access to resources and they have very restricted access to things. "Parents have become so used to, 'oh nah we've never done that, oh nah we're not going to do that'," Mac says. But when parents come into an environment where their child can explore and they can take a step back, they see a whole different child. "It's because we've never put them in a space where they can actually be themselves without restrictions," he says. The diagnosis of Mattias led Maria Pounui to leave her job in marketing, retrain and work for Autism New Zealand as a play coach. She's the other half of the driving force behind Spectroom. Her long term goal is to build a facility with wrap-around services for neurodivergent people of all ages, from day care for the little ones, to mock apartments for adults to practice everyday tasks. "We started with our little ones because that's all the funding that I had... but the goal is at the end to have these services where we can assist and support our community when they are adults," she says. Maria Pounui says while there are existing services already helping people with disabilities there simply aren't enough to serve all neurodiverse people. "We need to have services that are umbrella services... because transitions for our kids with disabilities are really hard," she says. Spectroom received global recognition within a year of opening, with FIFA asking Mac and Maria to build a similar sensory space at their centre at Eden Park. "It's a quiet, dim space for our kids, also for adults, for them to go when they get overwhelmed. "Especially for example at Eden Park when people get overwhelmed with crowd, crowded spaces, it could be anything, lighting, sound, and that triggers some people... and then sometimes they need a space to go into to recharge, recoup," Mac says. The sensory room was only meant to stay for the duration of the 2023 FIFA Womens World Cup but it was so popular that Eden Park asked for it to stay permanently. Now it's been expanded and Mac says they're working on a similar facility in Manukau, where he says the need is highest. "The original plan was to set one here (in Auckland), one in Wellington and one in Christchurch, that is still in the pipeline. But we have also recently become a trust. "Becoming a trust is not as straight forward as becoming a trust and then get funding, you still have to go through the whole process of proving who we are, why we need the funding and then we need to target our right audience. "It's really important that we get it right from the beginning, but we do plan to set more [facilities] around the country." Check out how to listen to and follow The Detail here . You can also stay up-to-date by liking us on Facebook or following us on Twitter .

RNZ News
13 hours ago
- RNZ News
New Zealand looks to learn from China's technology innovations
From left: Dr Liang Zheng from Tsinghua University, professor Michael Witbrock from the University of Auckland and Suzannah Jessep, chief executive of Asia New Zealand Foundation Photo: RNZ / Liu Chen New Zealand's politicians and business leaders are looking to tap into China's science and technology expertise. Artificial intelligence, robotics, electric vehicles and new forms of energy were frequently referenced by speakers and panelists at the 11th China Business Summit in Auckland on Friday. The event coincided with Technology Minister Shane Reti's announcement of a new institute to advance technology to be created in the country's largest city. Zheng Liang, deputy director of the China Institute for Science and Technology Policy at Tsinghua University, outlined the three stages of China's science and technology development. Initially, China just adopted technology from Western nations before integrating practice from around the world for indigenous innovation, he said. After entering the third stage, China was now striving for breakthroughs in more fundamental research and development, Liang said, adding that AI and electric vehicles were just some of the achievements. "What has made this happen [is] continuous investment in research and development in the past four decades," Liang said. He said ongoing policy support, China's openness to the world and successes in developing an internet economy also drove China's breakthroughs in AI. Liang highlighted China's use of AI in agriculture to help with harvesting, in healthcare to help with diagnosis and treatment, in pharmaceuticals to help with administration and stock control, in tourism to create virtual experiences, as well as in education manufacturing and governance. "I think New Zealand ... [can] do [something] similar," Liang said, pointing to agriculture and tourism specifically. Liang said the two countries complemented each other and could work together. "Maybe China could [provide] some practices [and] experiences, and New Zealand can [offer] the new potential scenarios [in terms of] how to adopt this kind of technology and experience," Liang said. One of Zheng Liang's slides, which outlined some reasons for China's AI breakthroughs. Photo: RNZ / Liu Chen Michael Witbrock, a professor of computer science at the University of Auckland, said New Zealand had "serious AI capability". "We can't replicate the power of AI research of China or the United States or the European Union," Witbrock said. "But we can - and we do - have the capability to significantly contribute to its development and, therefore, be part of determining our future and the future of our fellow humanity. "I hope you'll join us in helping us to build an AI capability in New Zealand ... and to direct it into technology as well for our economic advantage and for hopefully China's economic advantage as well." Witbrock expected growing pains while the country embraced AI but said it was better to face up to challenges. "New Zealand in the past has had a history of facing up to social reality and social change and doing the right thing and doing a thing which has, at those times, actually were periods of great innovation and great growth for New Zealand culture," he said. "I think we can do this again for AI and it's going to happen," Witbrock said. "The sooner we face up to it, the sooner we start to work out [such things as] how does economy work, how does resource allocation work, how do people get what they need to live their lives, the better we'll do. "In that transition period, there are enormous short-term gains for the country as well by ... exploiting ... the economic benefits of those productivity gains." Prime Minister Christopher Luxon speaks with summit chair and moderator Fran O'Sullivan on Friday. Photo: RNZ / Liu Chen Prime Minister Christopher Luxon said China's advancement in technology was "impressive" and "inspiring". "There are some real areas of expertise ... that's coming through some world-class universities, amazing research programmes and then obviously being able to convert that technology," he said. "We need to adopt a lot more technology and science innovation into our system as well because that tells me how we're going to get some of those productivity gains that we're so desperately looking for." Chinese Ambassador Wang Xiaolong speaks at the China Business Summit on Friday. Photo: RNZ / Liu Chen Chinese Ambassador Wang Xiaolong also highlighted China's success in satellite technology, quantum communications and computing, new energy solutions and AI. He said China valued its ties with New Zealand - "a consistent position that remains unchanged". Wang said China was ready to work with New Zealand to benefit people in both countries and to "inject more stability and certainty into this turbulent world".

RNZ News
13 hours ago
- RNZ News
Changes to needle exchange contract spark concerns
Changes to a decades-long needle exchange contract have left people worried the decision will breed distrust, potentially leading to needle-sharing. Health NZ has not renewed the contract for DISC Trust, which has operated needle exchange services across the South Island for 35 years. Health chiefs have instead opted for a new provider. Katie Todd reports. Tags: To embed this content on your own webpage, cut and paste the following: See terms of use.