Litcius/Paper detail

Machine learning in healthcare and the methodological priority of epistemology over ethics

Thomas Grote

2024Inquiry12 citationsDOI

Abstract

This paper develops an account of how the implementation of ML models into healthcare settings requires revising the methodological apparatus of philosophical bioethics. On this account, ML models are cognitive interventions that provide decision-support to physicians and patients. Due to reliability issues, opaque reasoning processes, and information asymmetries, ML models pose inferential problems for them. These inferential problems lay the grounds for many ethical problems that currently claim centre-stage in the bioethical debate. Accordingly, this paper argues that the best way to make progress in remedying these ethical problems is to distil their epistemic core and to identify appropriate epistemic norms as guardrails. The viability of this approach will be highlighted based on four key issues: trust, responsibility, paternalism, and fairness. In that respect, the paper also contributes to a more pronounced view of the specific methodological challenges for ethical theorizing, when the point of reference are complex statistical models that make predictions, rather than individual agents, acting for reasons.

Topics & Concepts

Health careSociologyEpistemologyEngineering ethicsPsychologyPhilosophyPolitical scienceEngineeringLawArtificial Intelligence in Healthcare and EducationEthics in Clinical ResearchHealthcare cost, quality, practices