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ETHICS AND GOVERNANCE OF ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE FOR HEALTH:WHO GUIDANCE

Authors :
Reis, Andreas Alois
Malpani, Rohit
Vayena, Effy
Majumder, Partha
Swaminathan, Soumya
Pujari, Sameer
Reeder, John
Mariano, Bernardo
Al Shorbachi, Narjeeb
Ema, Arisa
Ghoulia, Amel
Gibson, Jeniffer
Goodman, Kenneth W.
van den Hoven, Jeroen
Jayaram, Malavika
Jjingo, Daudi
Leong, Tze Yun
London, Alex John
Marwala, Thsilidzi
Mathur, Roli
Minssen, Timo
Morris, Andrew
Paolotti, Daniela
Paz Canales, Maria
Singh, Jerome
Whittaker, Robyn
Zeng, Yi
Source :
Reis, A A, Malpani, R, Vayena, E, Majumder, P, Swaminathan, S, Pujari, S, Reeder, J, Mariano, B, Al Shorbachi, N, Ema, A, Ghoulia, A, Gibson, J, Goodman, K W, van den Hoven, J, Jayaram, M, Jjingo, D, Leong, T Y, London, A J, Marwala, T, Mathur, R, Minssen, T, Morris, A, Paolotti, D, Paz Canales, M, Singh, J, Whittaker, R & Zeng, Y 2021, ETHICS AND GOVERNANCE OF ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE FOR HEALTH : WHO GUIDANCE . World Health Organization .
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
World Health Organization, 2021.

Abstract

See: https://www.who.int/publications/i/item/9789240029200: The WHO guidance on Ethics & Governance of Artificial Intelligence for Health is the product of eighteen months of deliberation amongst leading experts in ethics, digital technology, law, human rights, as well as experts from Ministries of Health. While new technologies that use artificial intelligence hold great promise to improve diagnosis, treatment, health research and drug development and to support governments carrying out public health functions, including surveillance and outbreak response, such technologies, according to the report, must put ethics and human rights at the heart of its design, deployment, and use.The report identifies the ethical challenges and risks with the use of artificial intelligence of health, six consensus principles to ensure AI works to the public benefit of all countries. It also contains a set of recommendations that can ensure the governance of artificial intelligence for health maximizes the promise of the technology and holds all stakeholders – in the public and private sector – accountable and responsive to the healthcare workers who will rely on these technologies and the communities and individuals whose health will be affected by its use.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Reis, A A, Malpani, R, Vayena, E, Majumder, P, Swaminathan, S, Pujari, S, Reeder, J, Mariano, B, Al Shorbachi, N, Ema, A, Ghoulia, A, Gibson, J, Goodman, K W, van den Hoven, J, Jayaram, M, Jjingo, D, Leong, T Y, London, A J, Marwala, T, Mathur, R, Minssen, T, Morris, A, Paolotti, D, Paz Canales, M, Singh, J, Whittaker, R & Zeng, Y 2021, ETHICS AND GOVERNANCE OF ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE FOR HEALTH : WHO GUIDANCE . World Health Organization .
Accession number :
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