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Artificial Intelligence in NICU and PICU: A Need for Ecological Validity, Accountability, and Human Factors

Avishek Choudhury, Estefania Urena

2022Healthcare22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Pediatric patients, particularly in neonatal and pediatric intensive care units (NICUs and PICUs), are typically at an increased risk of fatal decompensation. That being said, any delay in treatment or minor errors in medication dosage can overcomplicate patient health. Under such an environment, clinicians are expected to quickly and effectively comprehend large volumes of medical information to diagnose and develop a treatment plan for any baby. The integration of Artificial Intelligence (AI) into the clinical workflow can be a potential solution to safeguard pediatric patients and augment the quality of care. However, before making AI an integral part of pediatric care, it is essential to evaluate the technology from a human factors perspective, ensuring its readiness (technology readiness level) and ecological validity. Addressing AI accountability is also critical to safeguarding clinicians and improving AI acceptance in the clinical workflow. This article summarizes the application of AI in NICU/PICU and consecutively identifies the existing flaws in AI (from clinicians' standpoint), and proposes related recommendations, which, if addressed, can improve AIs' readiness for a real clinical environment.

Topics & Concepts

SafeguardingWorkflowAccountabilityIntensive careMedicineHealth careMedical emergencyMEDLINENursingPsychologyIntensive care medicineComputer scienceLawEconomicsDatabasePolitical scienceEconomic growthArtificial Intelligence in Healthcare and EducationHealthcare Technology and Patient Monitoring
Artificial Intelligence in NICU and PICU: A Need for Ecological Validity, Accountability, and Human Factors | Litcius