PlumX Metrics
Embed PlumX Metrics

Professional Perspectives on the Impact of Healthcare Artificial Intelligence on Clinical Roles and Skills

SSRN Electronic Journal
  • 0
    Citations
  • 577
    Usage
  • 0
    Captures
  • 0
    Mentions
  • 0
    Social Media
Metric Options:   Counts1 Year3 Year

Metrics Details

  • Usage
    577
    • Abstract Views
      487
    • Downloads
      90
  • Ratings
    • Download Rank
      603,698

Article Description

Background: Alongside the promise of improving clinical work, advances in healthcare artificial intelligence (AI) raise concerns about the risk of deskilling clinicians. This purpose of this study is to examine the issue of deskilling from the perspective of diverse professional stakeholders with knowledge and/or experiences in the development, deployment and regulation of healthcare AI. Methods: We conducted qualitative, semi-structured interviews with 72 diverse professionals with specialist AI expertise and/or professional or clinical expertise who were involved in development, deployment and/or regulation of healthcare AI. Data analysis using combined constructivist grounded theory and framework approach was performed concurrently with data collection. Findings: Our analysis showed participants had diverse views on three contentious issues regarding AI and deskilling.  The first involved competing views about the proper extent of AI-enabled automation in healthcare work, and which clinical tasks should or should not be automated. We identified a cluster of characteristics of tasks that were considered more suitable for automation. The second involved expectations about the impact of AI on clinical skills, and whether AI-enabled automation would lead to worse or better quality of healthcare. The third tension implicitly contrasted two models of healthcare work: a human-centric model and a technology-centric model.  These models assumed different values and priorities for healthcare work and its relationship to AI-enabled automation. Conclusion: Our study shows that diverse professional stakeholders involved in healthcare AI development, acquisition, deployment and regulation are attentive to the potential impact of healthcare AI on clinical skills, but have different views about the nature and valence (positive or negative) of this impact. Detailed engagement with different types of professional stakeholders allowed us to identify relevant concepts and values that could guide decisions about AI algorithm development and deployment.

Bibliographic Details

Yves Saint James Aquino; Wendy Rogers; Annette Braunack-Mayer; Helen Frazer; Khin Win; Nehmat Houssami; Christopher Degeling; Christopher Semsarian; Stacy M. Carter

Elsevier BV

artificial intelligence; medicine; Healthcare; Ethics; clinical skills; Automation

Provide Feedback

Have ideas for a new metric? Would you like to see something else here?Let us know