Artificial intelligence (AI) is rapidly becoming an integral part of everyday clinical practice, including cardiology and cardiovascular surgery. As AI increasingly influences diagnostic and therapeutic deci-sions, physicians are expected to engage with these systems in a critical, safe, and ethically grounded manner. This narrative review aims to explore how AI can be systematically integrated into undergra-duate and residency medical education, with particular focus on curriculum design, teaching strategies, assessment models, and educational infrastructure, while considering the context of the Turkish medi-cal education system. A narrative synthesis of international medical education literature, policy docu-ments, and institutional reports was conducted without quantitative meta-analysis. The review was guided by the principles of human-in-the-loop clinical reasoning, ethical AI use, and patient safety. Effective integration of AI into medical education requires a longitudinal and staged curriculum span-ning preclinical, clinical, and residency training. Assessment strategies must explicitly address AI-assisted decision-making and be supported by transparent institutional policies governing AI use in examinations, along with a secure, regulation-compliant digital infrastructure. Educational approaches should encourage learners to critically appraise and contextualize AI outputs rather than accept them uncritically. The reviewed literature supports a competency-based educational framework that integra-tes AI literacy, ethical reasoning, and context-aware clinical judgment. AI education should be consi-dered a core clinical competency that strengthens rather than replaces human judgment. Particularly in high-risk cardiovascular disciplines, a standardized, ethics-centered, and competency-based educatio-nal framework is essential to prepare future physicians for AI-augmented healthcare environments.
Keywords: Artificial intelligence, assessment, clinical decision support, ethics, medical education, residency trai-ning
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