WHO Urges Caution With Healthcare AI Deployments

As artificial intelligence deployments increase in pace and scope in healthcare organizations around the globe, the World Health Organization this week issued a plea for vigilance and deliberation when it comes to how AI and machine learning models are put to use.

WHY IT MATTERS
The WHO called for “caution to be exercised” in how AI is used in clinical and other healthcare settings – particularly the fast-evolving large language model tools such as ChatGPT.

In order to “protect and promote human well-being, human safety and autonomy” – as well as preserving public health – officials said it’s “imperative that the risks be examined carefully when using LLMs to improve access to health information, as a decision-support tool, or even to enhance diagnostic capacity in under-resourced settings to protect people’s health and reduce inequity.”

WHO acknowledged that the recent “meteoric public diffusion and growing experimental use” of tools such as ChatGPT, Bard, Bert others are “generating significant excitement around the potential to support people’s health needs.”

While experts at the U.N. body said they’re also enthusiastic about the “appropriate use” of those leading-edge algorithms, they’re also concerned that “caution that would normally be exercised for any new technology is not being exercised consistently with LLMs.”

WHO officials worry that “precipitous adoption of untested systems” not only causes harm to patients through medical errors and inaccurate information, but also “erode trust in AI and thereby undermine (or delay) the potential long-term benefits” of its use.

Specifically, the statement cited concerns about values of “transparency, inclusion, public engagement, expert supervision, and rigorous evaluation.”

WHO wants those imperatives to be top-of-mind as AI is deployed, and called for “clear evidence of benefit be measured” before widespread and routine use of LLMs and other AI models in healthcare delivery.

THE LARGER TREND
In just a matter of months, ChatGPT and generative AI have been making it clear that a new era is upon us when it comes to healthcare processes and decision-making. LLM models and other machine learning tools are already poised to impact patient engagement and communication, inform hospital ADT choices, make waves across the healthcare workforce and basically completely transform the way care is delivered, with plenty of unknowns and not a little risk.

It’s clear that there is a need for oversight of AI in healthcare and, more generally, a thoughtful approach to the how – and the why – those tools are put to use.

At HIMSS23 this past month, leaders from the World Health Organization and other health ministries from around the world spoke about the need to pursue digital health strategies that have patient access, safety and health equity as their north star.

ON THE RECORD
“WHO reiterates the importance of applying ethical principles and appropriate governance, as enumerated in the WHO guidance on the ethics and governance of AI for health, when designing, developing, and deploying AI for health,” said World Health Organization officials said in this week’s statement.

“The six core principles identified by WHO are: (1) protect autonomy; (2) promote human well-being, human safety, and the public interest; (3) ensure transparency, explainability, and intelligibility; (4) foster responsibility and accountability; (5) ensure inclusiveness and equity; (6) promote AI that is responsive and sustainable.”

 

Source Link

Recommended Articles

GOP Takes Aim At Hospital CEOs Over Affordability Crisis

House Republicans during a Tuesday hearing blamed hospital and health systems for high health costs, excoriating a group of CEOs for exorbitant benefits packages, large profit margins and mergers. “Our communities are better off with hospitals in them, but large health systems have taken advantage of that reality,” Ways and Means Committee chairman Jason Smith (R-Mo.) said. “Simply put, hospitals are charging an insane amount for care.” ...

Read More

Hospital CEOs Defend Charging Patients More At Facilities

Hospital CEOs came under fire at a House hearing Tuesday, with Republicans accusing them of overcharging patients and exploiting the system. Executives from HCA Healthcare, CommonSpirit Health, New York-Presbyterian and ECU Health testified before the House Ways and Means Committee, defending their pricing practices — including that they should be able to charge higher prices for the same services ...

Read More

Humana Pulls Back The Curtain On Planning For 2027 MA Bids

Humana executives gave investors a peek Wednesday into the company’s thinking around the 2027 Medicare Advantage bid cycle as elevated costs continue to sting the industry. CEO Jim Rechtin said during the insurer’s earnings call that to achieve the goal of returning to a “stable margin” by 2028, it will need to look at adjustments ...

Read More

Health Costs Still A Top Voter Concern, Poll Finds

Health costs continue to top the public’s list of affordability worries, and while Democrats have an edge over Republicans, both parties need to do more to convince independents, according to a new poll from health policy research group KFF. About nine in 10 voters said the issue of health costs will influence their decision to vote and who to vote for in ...

Read More
arrowcaret-downclosefacebook-squarehamburgerinstagram-squarelinkedin-squarepauseplaytwitter-squareyoutube-square