Clinician and computer: a study on patient perceptions of artificial intelligence in skeletal radiography
Autor: | Thomas James York, Gareth G. Jones, Heloise Jenney |
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Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
Male
Younger age Patients media_common.quotation_subject Radiography Health Informatics lcsh:Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics 030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging Teaching hospital Likert scale 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine computer methodologies Health Information Management Artificial Intelligence Surveys and Questionnaires BMJ Health Informatics Perception Health care Humans Medicine 030212 general & internal medicine Original Research media_common Computers business.industry patient care information science health care Preference Computer Science Applications Patient perceptions lcsh:R858-859.7 Female Artificial intelligence Tomography X-Ray Computed business |
Zdroj: | BMJ Health & Care Informatics BMJ Health & Care Informatics, Vol 27, Iss 3 (2020) |
ISSN: | 2632-1009 |
Popis: | BackgroundUp to half of all musculoskeletal injuries are investigated with plain radiographs. However, high rates of image interpretation error mean that novel solutions such as artificial intelligence (AI) are being explored.ObjectivesTo determine patient confidence in clinician-led radiograph interpretation, the perception of AI-assisted interpretation and management, and to identify factors which might influence these views.MethodsA novel questionnaire was distributed to patients attending fracture clinic in a large inner-city teaching hospital. Categorical and Likert scale questions were used to assess participant demographics, daily electronics use, pain score and perceptions towards AI used to assist in interpretation of their radiographs, and guide management.Results216 questionnaires were included (M=126, F=90). Significantly higher confidence in clinician rather than AI-assisted interpretation was observed (clinician=9.20, SD=1.27 vs AI=7.06, SD=2.13), 95.4% reported favouring clinician over AI-performed interpretation in the event of disagreement.Small positive correlations were observed between younger age/educational achievement and confidence in AI-assistance. Students demonstrated similarly increased confidence (8.43, SD 1.80), and were over-represented in the minority who indicated a preference for AI-assessment over their clinicians (50%).ConclusionsParticipant’s held the clinician’s assessment in the highest regard and expressed a clear preference for it over the hypothetical AI assessment. However, robust confidence scores for the role of AI-assistance in interpreting skeletal imaging suggest patients view the technology favourably.Findings indicate that younger, more educated patients are potentially more comfortable with a role for AI-assistance however further research is needed to overcome the small number of responses on which these observations are based. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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