ALKHOBAR: In a crowded refugee hospital in southern Lebanon, artificial intelligence has become an unexpected ally for exhausted doctors struggling to manage overwhelming patient loads. At Al-Hamshari Hospital, near Sidon’s Ein El-Hilweh camp, the scent of antiseptic mingles with diesel fumes from backup generators. Serving more than 4,000 patients each month with just 56 doctors and 31 nurses, many of them Palestinians excluded from Lebanon’s national healthcare system, the hospital is perpetually stretched thin.