Accenture: Most Health Organizations Can’t Ensure Responsible AI Use
Accenture: Most Health Organizations Can’t Ensure Responsible AI Use

Accenture: Most Health Organizations Can’t Ensure Responsible AI Use

Despite a growing interest in artificial intelligence, most healthcare organizations still lack the tools necessary to ensure responsible use of such technologies, finds a report from Accenture Health.

According to the report, Digital Health Technology Vision 2018, 81% of healthcare executives said they are not yet prepared to face the societal and liability issues needed to explain their AI systems’ decisions. Additionally, while 86% of respondents said that their organizations are using data to drive automated decision-making, the same proportion (86%) report they have not invested in the capabilities needed to verify data sources across their most critical systems.

Kaveh Safavi, head of Accenture’s health practice, observed that the current lack of AI data verification investment activity is exposing healthcare organizations to inaccurate, manipulated and biased data that can lead to corrupted insights and skewed results. “The 86% figure is critical,” he stated, “given that 24% of executives also said that they have been the target of adversarial AI behaviors, such as falsified location data or bot fraud on more than one occasion.” On a positive note, the study found that 73% of respondents plan to develop internal ethical standards for AI to ensure that their systems act responsibly.

Kaveh Safavi of Accenture

As a growing number of AI-powered healthcare tools enter the market, hospitals, clinics and other healthcare organizations are using intelligent technologies in various ways to become more agile, productive and collaborative. “Until recently, AI was mainly used as a back-end tool but is increasingly becoming part of the everyday consumer and clinician experience,” Safavi noted.

AI’s ability to sense, understand, act and learn enables it to augment human activity by supporting, or even taking over, tasks that bridge administrative and clinical healthcare functions — from risk analysis to medical imaging to supporting human judgment. “In terms of value and cost-savings, there are many ways in which AI can improve and change healthcare,” Safavi observed. Accenture estimates that key clinical health AI applications can create $150 billion in annual savings for the U.S. healthcare economy by 2026.

Moving toward greater compliance

Healthcare organizations recognize the value of AI not only for its potential cost savings, but also for its ability to tackle entrenched issues related to sustainability and access. Adopters are also hoping that IT will help them address the growing healthcare workforce shortage and the increasing dissatisfaction of healthcare consumers. “AI can help increase productivity and personalization in healthcare in ways that few other technologies can,” Safavi explained.

Ultimately, healthcare organizations will need to turn to AI-powered automation to improve a wide range of services. “Because of this, the market will help drive compliance over time as trust both from consumers and clinicians is the only way to truly foster adoption,” Safavi predicted.

Read the source article in Information Week.