Litcius/Paper detail

How can artificial intelligence decrease cognitive and work burden for front line practitioners?

Tejal K. Gandhi, David C. Classen, Christine A. Sinsky, David C. Rhew, Nikki Vande Garde, A. J. Roberts, Frank Federico

2023JAMIA Open123 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Artificial intelligence (AI) has tremendous potential to improve the cognitive and work burden of clinicians across a range of clinical activities, which could lead to reduced burnout and better clinical care. The recent explosion of generative AI nicely illustrates this potential. Developers and organizations deploying AI have a responsibility to ensure AI is designed and implemented with end-user input, has mechanisms to identify and potentially reduce bias, and that the impact on cognitive and work burden is measured, monitored, and improved. This article focuses specifically on the role AI can play in reducing cognitive and work burden, outlines the critical issues associated with the use of AI, and serves as a call to action for vendors and users to work together to develop functionality that addresses these challenges.

Topics & Concepts

CognitionFront lineWork (physics)Computer scienceAction (physics)Generative grammarBurnoutRisk analysis (engineering)Artificial intelligencePsychologyMedicineEngineeringClinical psychologyPsychiatryLawPolitical scienceMechanical engineeringPhysicsQuantum mechanicsArtificial Intelligence in Healthcare and EducationClinical Reasoning and Diagnostic SkillsHealthcare cost, quality, practices