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Ethics in Health Informatics

Kenneth W. Goodman

2020Yearbook of Medical Informatics44 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Contemporary bioethics was fledged and is sustained by challenges posed by new technologies. These technologies have affected many lives. Yet health informatics affects more lives than any of them. The challenges include the development and the appropriate uses and users of machine learning software, the balancing of privacy rights against the needs of public health and clinical practice in a time of Big Data analytics, whether and how to use this technology, and the role of ethics and standards in health policy. Historical antecedents in statistics and evidence-based practice foreshadow some of the difficulties now faced, but the scope and scale of these challenges requires that ethics, too, be brought to scale in parallel, especially given the size of contemporary data sets and the processing power of new computers. Fortunately, applied ethics affords a variety of tools to help identify and rank applicable values, support best practices, and contribute to standards. The bioethics community can in partnership with the informatics community arrive at policies that promote the health sciences while reaffirming the many and varied rights that patients expect will be honored.

Topics & Concepts

BioethicsInformaticsScope (computer science)Health informaticsBig dataEngineering ethicsGeneral partnershipAnalyticsHealth Administration InformaticsPolitical scienceScale (ratio)Data sciencePublic relationsKnowledge managementComputer scienceHealth careEngineeringLawOperating systemQuantum mechanicsProgramming languagePhysicsEthics in Clinical ResearchArtificial Intelligence in Healthcare and EducationEthics and Social Impacts of AI
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