| Literature DB >> 34284756 |
Alison L Antes1, Sara Burrous2, Bryan A Sisk3, Matthew J Schuelke4, Jason D Keune5, James M DuBois2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Healthcare is expected to increasingly integrate technologies enabled by artificial intelligence (AI) into patient care. Understanding perceptions of these tools is essential to successful development and adoption. This exploratory study gauged participants' level of openness, concern, and perceived benefit associated with AI-driven healthcare technologies. We also explored socio-demographic, health-related, and psychosocial correlates of these perceptions.Entities:
Keywords: Acceptance of healthcare; Artificial intelligence; Benefits; Bioethics; Concerns; Machine learning; Openness; Perceptions
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34284756 PMCID: PMC8293482 DOI: 10.1186/s12911-021-01586-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Inform Decis Mak ISSN: 1472-6947 Impact factor: 2.796
Dimensions operationalized in the scenario-based measure
| Definition | |
|---|---|
| Concerns | |
| Privacy | Concern about loss of control of personal information, misuse of information, and who can access personal information [ |
| Transparency/uncertainty | Concern about the comprehensibility of AI results or recommendations and uncertainty about being made aware when AI is used in healthcare [ |
| Human element of care | Concern about AI decreasing the clinician’s role in healthcare and these technologies impacting the interactions and relationships of clinicians and patients [ |
| Social justice | Concern about unfairness in the distribution of the benefits and burdens of applications of AI in healthcare [ |
| Cost for healthcare system | Concern about whether AI applications will increase the costs of healthcare delivery in the U.S. [ |
| Benefits | |
| Access and convenience | Perceived benefit of AI making it easier for individuals to obtain medical care [ |
| Quality and accuracy | Perceived benefit of AI applications increasing the effectiveness of medical care [ |
| Access to personal health knowledge | Perceived benefit of easily obtaining reliable and pertinent information outside of the clinical setting for use to improve personal health [ |
| Improving personal cost of care | Perceived benefit that AI could reduce the costs of healthcare for individuals [ |
Participant socio-demographics and healthcare variables
| Sample 1 | Sample 2 | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age in years | M = 37.2 ± 11.0 Range 65, 18–83 | M = 36.9 ± 11.0 Range 53, 19–72 | M = 37.1 ± 11.0 Range 65, 18–83 |
Some percentages add to more than 100%, due to rounding
an = 11 selected other or prefer not to answer
bnot mutually exclusive categories, participants selected all that apply
cn = 8 selected prefer not to answer
dAmerican Indian, Alaska Native, Native Hawaiian, or Pacific Islander
ecaregiver or homemaker, retired, or other
fn = 11 selected prefer not to answer
gn = 17 selected “I don’t know”
honly asked of those indicating healthcare utilization in last 12 months (n = 735)
Fig. 1Mean scenario openness scores with 95% CIs. Large vertical lines indicate grand mean with 95% CI
Descriptives for openness, concern, and benefit scores and psychosocial variables
| No. of items | Cronbach’s α | Min | Max | Mean | SD | 95% CI for mean | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Opennessa | 6 | .80 | 1.0 | 5.0 | 3.06 | .87 | [3.00, 3.12] |
| Concern | 22 | .92 | 1.2 | 7.0 | 5.34 | .82 | [5.29, 5.39] |
| Benefit | 16 | .89 | 2.6 | 7.0 | 5.49 | .75 | [5.44, 5.54] |
| Health System Trust Index | 20 | .91 | 4.0 | 16.0 | 9.48 | 2.63 | [9.31, 9.65] |
| Trust in technology | 3 | .89 | 1.0 | 7.0 | 4.95 | 1.32 | [4.87, 5.03] |
| Faith in technology | 4 | .87 | 1.0 | 7.0 | 5.56 | .83 | [5.51, 5.61] |
| Conscientiousness | 2 | .67 | 1.5 | 7.0 | 5.59 | 1.23 | [5.51, 5.67] |
| Agreeableness | 2 | .55 | 1.0 | 7.0 | 5.37 | 1.30 | [5.29, 5.45] |
| Extraversion | 2 | .80 | 1.0 | 7.0 | 3.37 | 1.77 | [3.26, 3.48] |
| Emotional stability | 2 | .82 | 1.0 | 7.0 | 4.91 | 1.64 | [4.80, 5.02] |
| Openness (trait-based) | 2 | .61 | 1.0 | 7.0 | 5.08 | 1.34 | [4.99, 5.17] |
| Social conservatism | 7 | .90 | 0.0 | 100.0 | 55.77 | 25.65 | [54.13, 57.40] |
| Economic conservatism | 5 | .73 | 0.0 | 100.0 | 53.63 | 20.53 | [52.31, 54.95] |
N = 936, except for agreeableness (n = 935), emotional stability (n = 934), faith in technology (n = 934), trust in technology (n = 933) due to missing data
aCorrelations between the Perspective of AI Technologies scores: Openness with concern, r = − .52, 95% CI [− .57, − .47]; openness with benefit, r = .61, 95% CI [.57, .65]; concern with benefit, r = − .05 CI [− .11, − .01]
Correlations of openness, concern, and benefit scores with all study variables
| Openness | Concern | Benefit | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| r | 95% CI | r | 95% CI | r | 95% CI | |
| Age | − .12 | [− .18, − .06] | .06 | [.00, .12] | − .03 | [− .09, .03] |
| Sex (1 = Male, 0 = Female) | .10 | [.04, .16] | − .20 | [− .26, − .14] | − .03 | [− .09, .04] |
| Race (1 = White, 0 = Non-White)a | − .05 | [− .11, .01] | .01 | [− .05, .07] | − .08 | [− .14, − .02] |
| Ethnicity (1 = Latino, 0 = non-Latino) | .06 | [.00, .12] | − .09 | [− .15, − .03] | − .02 | [− .08, .04] |
| Household income | .07 | [.01, .13] | − .08 | [− .14, − .02] | .07 | [.01, .13] |
| Community type | .06 | [.00, .12] | − .06 | [− .12, .00] | .01 | [− .05, .07] |
| Employment statusb | .17 | [.11, .23] | − .18 | [− .24, − .12] | .05 | [− .01, .11] |
| Education | .04 | [− .02, .10] | .03 | [− .03, .09] | .01 | [− .05, .07] |
| Health status | .08 | [.02, .14] | − .12 | [− .18, − .06] | − .02 | [− .08, .04] |
| Healthcare locationc | .03 | [− .03, .09] | − .01 | [− .07, .05] | .02 | [− .04, .08] |
| Healthcare choiced | .08 | [.02, .14] | − .06 | [− .12, .00] | .11 | [.05, 17] |
| Health insurance (1 = Yes, 0 = No) | .09 | [.03, .15] | − .10 | [− .16, − .04] | .05 | [− .01, .11] |
| Healthcare satisfaction (n = 735) | .11 | [.04, .18] | − .07 | [− .14, .00] | .14 | [.07, .21] |
| Health System Trust Index | .27 | [.21, .33] | − .27 | [− .33, − .21] | .21 | [.15, .27] |
| Trust in technology | .41 | [.36, 46] | − .21 | [− .27, − .15] | .41 | [.36, .46] |
| Faith in technology | .38 | [.32, .43] | − .10 | [− .16, − .04] | .46 | [.41, .51] |
| Conscientiousness | .02 | [− .04, .08] | .11 | [.05, .17] | .15 | [.09, .21] |
| Agreeableness | .08 | [.02, .14] | .11 | [.05, .17] | .20 | [.14, .26] |
| Extraversion | .08 | [.02, .14] | − .12 | [− .18, − .06] | .04 | [− .02, .10] |
| Emotional stability | .08 | [.02, .14] | − .06 | [− .12, .00] | .07 | [.01, .13] |
| Openness (trait-based) | .07 | [.01, .13] | .07 | [.01, .13] | .05 | [− .01, .11] |
| Social conservatism | − .01 | [− .07, .05] | − .10 | [− .16, − .04] | .05 | [− .01, .11] |
| Economic conservatism | − .06 | [− .12, .00] | − .06 | [− .12, .00] | .02 | [− .04, .08] |
N = 936 (except as noted for specific variables in Tables 1 and 2)
aParticipants who selected any race other than White, or in addition to White, were classified as Non-White for purposes of this analysis
b1 = full-time employment, 0 = all other options
c1 = doctor office or private clinic, 0 = all other options
d1 = great or some choice; 0 = little to no choice
Stepwise regression models predicting openness, concern, and benefit
| Predictor | Model 1: Openness | Model 2: Concern | Model 3: Benefit | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| B | 95% CI | β | B | 95% CI | β | B | 95% CI | β | |
| Age | − 0.01 | [− 0.01, 0.00] | − 0.07* | 0.00 | [0.00, 0.00] | 0.00 | 0.00 | [− 0.01, 0.00] | − 0.03 |
| Sex | 0.08 | [− 0.02, 0.18] | 0.05 | − 0.22 | [− 0.32, − 0.12] | − 0.13*** | − 0.07 | [− 0.15, 0.02] | − 0.04 |
| Race | − 0.01 | [− 0.14, 0.11] | − 0.01 | − 0.00 | [− 0.12, 0.12] | − 0.00 | − 0.12 | [− 0.22, − 0.01] | − 0.06* |
| Ethnicity | 0.05 | [− 0.14, 0.23] | 0.01 | − 0.15 | [− 0.33, 0.03] | − 0.05 | − 0.11 | [− 0.26, 0.05] | − 0.04 |
| Employment status | 0.27 | [0.16, 0.37] | 0.14*** | − 0.24 | [− 0.35, − 0.13] | − 0.14*** | |||
| Health status | − 0.23 | [− 0.36, − 0.09] | − 0.11** | ||||||
| Health system trust | 0.04 | [0.02, 0.06] | 0.12*** | − 0.06 | [− 0.08, − 0.04] | − 0.20*** | |||
| Trust in technology | 0.17 | [0.12, 0.21] | 0.25*** | − 0.10 | [− 0.14, − 0.06] | − 0.16*** | 0.12 | [0.08, 0.16] | 0.22*** |
| Faith in technology | 0.22 | [0.15, 0.29] | 0.21*** | 0.30 | [0.24, 0.37] | 0.34*** | |||
| Conscientiousness | − 0.06 | [− 0.10, − 0.02] | − 0.09** | 0.12 | [0.08, 0.16] | 0.18*** | |||
| Agreeableness | 0.10 | [0.06, 0.14] | 0.15*** | ||||||
| Extraversion | − 0.04 | [− 0.07, − 0.01] | − 0.08** | ||||||
| Social conservatism | 0.00 | [0.00, 0.00] | − 0.07* | ||||||
| Economic conservatism | 0.00 | [− 0.01, 0.00] | − 0.07* | ||||||
| R2 | .26*** | .21*** | .25*** | ||||||
N = 916. Age, sex, race, and ethnicity entered in a first step as control variables. Age is continuous. Variables are coded as follows: Sex (1 male; 0 female), race (1 White; 0 non-White), and ethnicity (1 Latino; 0 not-Latino). Employment status (1 full-time; 0 other); health status (1 good/very good/excellent; 0 poor/fair)
*p < .05; **p < .01; ***p < .001