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Advances in prosthetic technology: a perspective on ethical considerations for development and clinical translation

Hayden Gavette, Cody L. McDonald, Kristin M. Kostick, Ashley Mullen, Bijan Najafi, M. G. Finco

2024Frontiers in Rehabilitation Sciences19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Technological advancements of prostheses in recent years, such as haptic feedback, active power, and machine learning for prosthetic control, have opened new doors for improved functioning, satisfaction, and overall quality of life. However, little attention has been paid to ethical considerations surrounding the development and translation of prosthetic technologies into clinical practice. This article, based on current literature, presents perspectives surrounding ethical considerations from the authors' multidisciplinary views as prosthetists (HG, AM, CLM, MGF), as well as combined research experience working directly with people using prostheses (AM, CLM, MGF), wearable technologies for rehabilitation (MGF, BN), machine learning and artificial intelligence (BN, KKQ), and ethics of advanced technologies (KKQ). The target audience for this article includes developers, manufacturers, and researchers of prosthetic devices and related technology. We present several ethical considerations for current advances in prosthetic technology, as well as topics for future research, that may inform product and policy decisions and positively influence the lives of those who can benefit from advances in prosthetic technology.

Topics & Concepts

Engineering ethicsMultidisciplinary approachPerspective (graphical)Wearable technologyWearable computerHaptic technologyPsychologyEngineering managementEngineeringComputer scienceSociologyArtificial intelligenceSocial scienceEmbedded systemMuscle activation and electromyography studiesProsthetics and Rehabilitation RoboticsNeuroscience and Neural Engineering
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