| Literature DB >> 35020064 |
Elliott Crigger1, Karen Reinbold2, Chelsea Hanson2, Audiey Kao2, Kathleen Blake2, Mira Irons2.
Abstract
Augmented Intelligence (AI) systems have the power to transform health care and bring us closer to the quadruple aim: enhancing patient experience, improving population health, reducing costs, and improving the work life of health care providers. Earning physicians' trust is critical for accelerating adoption of AI into patient care. As technology evolves, the medical community will need to develop standards for these innovative technologies and re-visit current regulatory systems that physicians and patients rely on to ensure that health care AI is responsible, evidence-based, free from bias, and designed and deployed to promote equity. To develop actionable guidance for trustworthy AI in health care, the AMA reviewed literature on the challenges health care AI poses and reflected on existing guidance as a starting point for addressing those challenges (including models for regulating the introduction of innovative technologies into clinical care).Entities:
Keywords: Accountability; Augmented intelligence/artificial intelligence; Equity/access to care; Ethics; Health care innovation; Standards
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35020064 PMCID: PMC8755670 DOI: 10.1007/s10916-021-01790-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Syst ISSN: 0148-5598 Impact factor: 4.460
Common themes from AI guidelines and regulations
| Privacy | Data subjects should have come degree of influence over how and why information about them is used |
|---|---|
| Accountability | AI systems should be subject to oversight during development and deployment; right remedies should be provided if harm occurs |
| Safety and Security | AI systems must be reliable and perform as intended’ systems must be appropriately protected against external threats |
| Transparency and explainability | It must be clear when AI systems are being used and for what task’ justifications for decision outputs should be intelligible |
| Fairness and non-discrimination | Steps should be taken to prevent and mitigate against discrimination risks in the design, development, and application of AI systems |
| Human control of technology | Important decisions are still subject to human control |
| Professional responsibility | Individuals and teams involved in the development and deployment of AI systems take responsibility for the performance and effects of those systems |
| Promotion of human values | The ends to which AI systems are devoted and how they are implemented and should correspond with core social norms |
Crosscutting responsibilities of developers, deployers, and end users in fulfilling commitments to ethics, evidence, and equity
| Responsibility | Developer | Deployer | Physician |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ensure the AI system addresses a meaningful clinical goal | ☑ | ☑ | |
| Ensure the AI system works as intended | ☑ | ☑ | |
| Explore and resolve legal implications of the AI system [a]a prior to implementation and agree upon professional and/or governmental oversight for safe, effective, and fair use of and access to health care AI | ☑ | ☑ | ☑ |
| Develop a clear protocol to identify and correct for potential bias | ☑ | ☑ | ☑ |
| Ensure appropriate patient safeguards are in place for direct-to-consumer tools that lack physician oversight | ☑ | ||
| Make clinical decisions such as diagnosis and treatment | ☑ | ||
| Have the authority and ability to override the AI system | ☑ | ||
| Ensure meaningful oversight is in place for ongoing monitoring | ☑ | ☑ | |
| Ensure the AI system continues to perform as intended through performance monitoring & maintenance | ☑ | ☑ | |
| Ensure ethical issues identified at the time of purchase and during use have been addressed.b | ☑ | ||
| Ensure clear protocols exist for enforcement and accountability, including a clear protocol to ensure equitable implementation | ☑ | ☑ | ☑ |
aSuch as issues of liability or intellectual property
bIncluding but not limited to safeguarding patients’ and other individuals’ privacy interests and preserving the security and integrity of personal information; securing patient consent; and providing patients’ access to records
Trustworthy augmented intelligence in the context of the quadruple aim
| Aim 1. Enhancing patient experience |
|---|
Aim 2. Improving population health Health care AI addresses high-priority clinical needs and advances health equity by reducing disparities rooted in historical and contemporary injustice and discrimination, helping all patients inclusive of identity and socioeconomic factors |
Aim 3. Reducing cost Oversight and regulatory structures account for the risk of harm and benefit posed by healthcare AI systems. Payment and coverage on following laws and regulations, providing appropriate levels of clinical validation and high-quality evidence, and advancing affordability and access |
Aim 4. Improving the work life of health care providers Physicians are engaged in developing and implementing health care AI tools that augment their ability to provide high-quality clinically validated health care to patients and improve their well-being. Barriers to adoption such as lack of education on AI and liability and payment issues are resolved |