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Breaking bad news in the era of artificial intelligence and algorithmic medicine: an exploration of disclosure and its ethical justification using the hedonic calculus

Benjamin Post, Cosmin Badea, A. Aldo Faisal, Stephen J. Brett

2022AI and Ethics12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

An appropriate ethical framework around the use of Artificial Intelligence (AI) in healthcare has become a key desirable with the increasingly widespread deployment of this technology. Advances in AI hold the promise of improving the precision of outcome prediction at the level of the individual. However, the addition of these technologies to patient-clinician interactions, as with any complex human interaction, has potential pitfalls. While physicians have always had to carefully consider the ethical background and implications of their actions, detailed deliberations around fast-moving technological progress may not have kept up. We use a common but key challenge in healthcare interactions, the disclosure of bad news (likely imminent death), to illustrate how the philosophical framework of the 'Felicific Calculus' developed in the eighteenth century by Jeremy Bentham, may have a timely quasi-quantitative application in the age of AI. We show how this ethical algorithm can be used to assess, across seven mutually exclusive and exhaustive domains, whether an AI-supported action can be morally justified.

Topics & Concepts

Software deploymentAction (physics)Key (lock)Outcome (game theory)Artificial intelligenceHealth careEthical issuesComputer sciencePsychologyEngineering ethicsLawComputer securityPolitical scienceMathematicsEngineeringQuantum mechanicsPhysicsMathematical economicsOperating systemArtificial Intelligence in Healthcare and EducationHealthcare cost, quality, practicesClinical Reasoning and Diagnostic Skills
Breaking bad news in the era of artificial intelligence and algorithmic medicine: an exploration of disclosure and its ethical justification using the hedonic calculus | Litcius