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Physicians’ Perceptions of and Satisfaction With Artificial Intelligence in Cancer Treatment: A Clinical Decision Support System Experience and Implications for Low-Middle–Income Countries

Srinivas Emani, Angela Rui, Hermano Alexandre Lima Rocha, Rubina Rizvi, Sérgio Ferreira Juaçaba, Gretchen Purcell Jackson, David W. Bates

2022JMIR Cancer37 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

As technology continues to improve, health care systems have the opportunity to use a variety of innovative tools for decision-making, including artificial intelligence (AI) applications. However, there has been little research on the feasibility and efficacy of integrating AI systems into real-world clinical practice, especially from the perspectives of clinicians who use such tools. In this paper, we review physicians' perceptions of and satisfaction with an AI tool, Watson for Oncology, which is used for the treatment of cancer. Watson for Oncology has been implemented in several different settings, including Brazil, China, India, South Korea, and Mexico. By focusing on the implementation of an AI-based clinical decision support system for oncology, we aim to demonstrate how AI can be both beneficial and challenging for cancer management globally and particularly for low-middle-income countries. By doing so, we hope to highlight the need for additional research on user experience and the unique social, cultural, and political barriers to the successful implementation of AI in low-middle-income countries for cancer care.

Topics & Concepts

Low and middle income countriesWatsonVariety (cybernetics)Cancer survivorshipHealth careHealthcare systemPerceptionMedicineDeveloping countryKnowledge managementMedical educationPsychologyCancerArtificial intelligencePolitical scienceComputer scienceEconomic growthSurvivorship curveInternal medicineNeuroscienceEconomicsLawArtificial Intelligence in Healthcare and EducationAI in cancer detectionCOVID-19 diagnosis using AI
Physicians’ Perceptions of and Satisfaction With Artificial Intelligence in Cancer Treatment: A Clinical Decision Support System Experience and Implications for Low-Middle–Income Countries | Litcius