首页|Study Results from Vanderbilt University Medical Center Broaden Understanding of Artificial Intelligence (An Ethically Supported Framework for Determining Patie nt Notification and Informed Consent Practices When Using Artificial Intelligenc e In ...)
Study Results from Vanderbilt University Medical Center Broaden Understanding of Artificial Intelligence (An Ethically Supported Framework for Determining Patie nt Notification and Informed Consent Practices When Using Artificial Intelligenc e In ...)
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By a News Reporter-Staff News Editor at Robotics & Machine Learning Daily News Daily News-Researchers detail new data in Artific ial Intelligence. According to news originating from Nashville, Tennessee, by Ne wsRx correspondents, research stated, "Artificial intelligence (AI) is increasin gly being used in health care. Without an ethically supportable, standard approa ch to knowing when patients should be informed about AI, hospital systems and cl inicians run the risk of fostering mistrust among their patients and the public. " Our news journalists obtained a quote from the research from Vanderbilt Universi ty Medical Center, "Therefore, hospital leaders need guidance on when to tell pa tients about the use of AI in their care. In this article, we provide such guida nce. To determine which AI technologies fall into each of the identified categor ies (no notification or no informed consent [IC],notification only, and formal IC), we propose that AI use-cases should be eval uated using the following criteria: (1) AI model autonomy, (2) departure from st andards of practice, (3) whether the AI model is patient facing, (4) clinical ri sk introduced by the model, and (5) administrative burdens. We take each of thes e in turn, using a case example of AI in health care to illustrate our proposed framework."
NashvilleTennesseeUnited StatesNor th and Central AmericaArtificial IntelligenceEmerging TechnologiesHospital sMachine LearningVanderbilt University Medical Center