Litcius/Paper detail

A framework to identify ethical concerns with ML-guided care workflows: a case study of mortality prediction to guide advance care planning

Diana Cagliero, Natalie Deuitch, Nigam H. Shah, Chris Feudtner, Danton Char

2023Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Identifying ethical concerns with ML applications to healthcare (ML-HCA) before problems arise is now a stated goal of ML design oversight groups and regulatory agencies. Lack of accepted standard methodology for ethical analysis, however, presents challenges. In this case study, we evaluate use of a stakeholder "values-collision" approach to identify consequential ethical challenges associated with an ML-HCA for advanced care planning (ACP). Identification of ethical challenges could guide revision and improvement of the ML-HCA. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We conducted semistructured interviews of the designers, clinician-users, affiliated administrators, and patients, and inductive qualitative analysis of transcribed interviews using modified grounded theory. RESULTS: Seventeen stakeholders were interviewed. Five "values-collisions"-where stakeholders disagreed about decisions with ethical implications-were identified: (1) end-of-life workflow and how model output is introduced; (2) which stakeholders receive predictions; (3) benefit-harm trade-offs; (4) whether the ML design team has a fiduciary relationship to patients and clinicians; and, (5) how and if to protect early deployment research from external pressures, like news scrutiny, before research is completed. DISCUSSION: From these findings, the ML design team prioritized: (1) alternative workflow implementation strategies; (2) clarification that prediction was only evaluated for ACP need, not other mortality-related ends; and (3) shielding research from scrutiny until endpoint driven studies were completed. CONCLUSION: In this case study, our ethical analysis of this ML-HCA for ACP was able to identify multiple sites of intrastakeholder disagreement that mark areas of ethical and value tension. These findings provided a useful initial ethical screening.

Topics & Concepts

ScrutinyWorkflowStakeholderGrounded theoryQualitative researchHarmMedicineAdvance care planningNursingPsychologyManagement sciencePalliative carePublic relationsComputer scienceSociologyPolitical scienceEngineeringSocial psychologyLawDatabaseSocial sciencePalliative Care and End-of-Life IssuesGeriatric Care and Nursing HomesFrailty in Older Adults