"We can't lose sight of ensuring that this technology is deployed with a human-centered approach."
That's the message from the American College of Healthcare Executives as it pushes for responsible use of artificial intelligence in health care, USA Today reports.
According to the AHA's website, responsible AI (RAI) is "evolving into a discipline to drive value against organizational goals, compliance, and trust within the context of AI."
RAI focuses on "value and return on investment" and includes things like "compliance, liability, and reputational risk," as well as "how leaders can 'knock out the noise' to focus on core RAI priorities."
"We've already seen generative AI reshape health care worker tasks, most notably in electronic health record (EHR) software integration of GPT-4 to generate patient chart summaries," the AHA website states.
But there are also "financial, legal, and ethical implications."
For example, the Wall Street Journal reports there's been a "dramatic shift" in how health care is paid for, with payers paying an average of $3,129 per patient in 2016more than three times what they paid in 2002.
And the Journal notes the average age of a patient starts to climb as well, from 55 in Read the Entire Article
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