Back to Search Start Over

Artificial intelligence in medicine and healthcare: a review and classification of current and near-future applications and their ethical and social Impact

Authors :
Universidad de Sevilla. Departamento de Física Aplicada III
Universidad de Sevilla. Departamento de Anatomía y Embriología Humana
Universidad de Sevilla. TEP203: Fisica Interdisciplinar Fundamentos y Aplicaciones
Gómez-González, Emilio
Gómez, Emilia
Márquez Rivas, Javier
Guerrero-Claro, Manuel
Fernández-Lizaranzu, Isabel
Relimpio-López, María Isabel
Dorado, Manuel E.
Mayorga-Buiza, M.J.
Izquierdo Ayuso, Guillermo
Capitan-Morales, Luis-Cristobal
Universidad de Sevilla. Departamento de Física Aplicada III
Universidad de Sevilla. Departamento de Anatomía y Embriología Humana
Universidad de Sevilla. TEP203: Fisica Interdisciplinar Fundamentos y Aplicaciones
Gómez-González, Emilio
Gómez, Emilia
Márquez Rivas, Javier
Guerrero-Claro, Manuel
Fernández-Lizaranzu, Isabel
Relimpio-López, María Isabel
Dorado, Manuel E.
Mayorga-Buiza, M.J.
Izquierdo Ayuso, Guillermo
Capitan-Morales, Luis-Cristobal
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

This paper provides an overview of the current and near-future applications of Artificial Intelligence (AI) in Medicine and Health Care and presents a classification according to their ethical and societal aspects, potential benefits and pitfalls, and issues that can be considered controversial and are not deeply discussed in the literature. This work is based on an analysis of the state of the art of research and technology, including existing software, personal monitoring devices, genetic tests and editing tools, personalized digital models, online platforms, augmented reality devices, and surgical and companion robotics. Motivated by our review, we present and describe the notion of “extended personalized medicine”, we then review existing applications of AI in medicine and healthcare and explore the public perception of medical AI systems, and how they show, simultaneously, extraordinary opportunities and drawbacks that even question fundamental medical concepts. Many of these topics coincide with urgent priorities recently defined by the World Health Organization for the coming decade. In addition, we study the transformations of the roles of doctors and patients in an age of ubiquitous information, identify the risk of a division of Medicine into “fake-based”, “patient-generated”, and “scientifically tailored”, and draw the attention of some aspects that need further thorough analysis and public debate.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1240067240
Document Type :
Electronic Resource