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Ethical issues in using ambient intelligence in health-care settings

Nicole Martinez‐Martin, Zelun Luo, Amit Kaushal, Ehsan Adeli, Albert Haque, Sara Kelly, Sarah Wieten, Mildred K. Cho, David Magnus, Li Fei-Fei, Kevin A. Schulman, Arnold Milstein

2020The Lancet Digital Health156 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Ambient intelligence is increasingly finding applications in health-care settings, such as helping to ensure clinician and patient safety by monitoring staff compliance with clinical best practices or relieving staff of burdensome documentation tasks. Ambient intelligence involves using contactless sensors and contact-based wearable devices embedded in health-care settings to collect data (eg, imaging data of physical spaces, audio data, or body temperature), coupled with machine learning algorithms to efficiently and effectively interpret these data. Despite the promise of ambient intelligence to improve quality of care, the continuous collection of large amounts of sensor data in health-care settings presents ethical challenges, particularly in terms of privacy, data management, bias and fairness, and informed consent. Navigating these ethical issues is crucial not only for the success of individual uses, but for acceptance of the field as a whole.

Topics & Concepts

Ambient intelligenceWearable computerDocumentationHealth careData collectionWearable technologyComputer scienceInternet privacyHuman–computer interactionEmbedded systemEconomic growthMathematicsStatisticsEconomicsProgramming languageArtificial Intelligence in Healthcare and EducationPrivacy-Preserving Technologies in DataCOVID-19 diagnosis using AI
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