[The environmental impact of digital technology and artificial intelligence, in the era of digital pathology].

Journal: Annales de pathologie
PMID:

Abstract

While digitization and artificial intelligence represent the future of our specialty, future is also constrained by global warming and overstepping of planetary limits, threatening human health and the functioning of the healthcare system. The report by the Délégation ministérielle du numérique en santé and the French government's ecological planning of the healthcare system confirm the need to control the environmental impact of digital technology. Indeed, despite the promises of dematerialization, digital technology is a very material industry, generating greenhouse gas emissions, problematic consumption of water and mineral resources, and social impacts. The digital sector is impacting at every stage: (i) manufacture of equipment; (ii) use; and (iii) end-of-life of equipment, which, when recycled, can only be recycled to a very limited extent. This is a fast-growing sector, and the digitization of our specialty is part of its acceleration and its impact. Understanding the consequences of digitalization and artificial intelligence, and phenomena such as the rebound effect, is an essential prerequisite for the implementation of a sober, responsible, and sustainable digital pathology. The aim of this update is to help pathologists better understand the environmental impact of digital technology. As healthcare professionals, we have a responsibility to combine technological advances with an awareness of their impact, within a systemic vision of human health.

Authors

  • Thomas Guillory
    La Fresque du Numérique, 40, rue des Grands-Champs, 75020 Paris, France.
  • Cyprien Tilmant
  • Alexis Trécourt
    Service de pathologie multi-site, hospices civils de Lyon, hôpital Lyon-Sud, 165, chemin du Grand-Revoyet, 69495 Oullins-Pierre-Bénite, France; Faculté de médecine et de maïeutique de Lyon-Sud-Charles-Mérieux, université Claude-Bernard-Lyon I, 165, chemin du Petit-Revoyet, 69921, Oullins, France.
  • Lucie Gaillot-Durand
    Service de pathologie multi-site, hospices civils de Lyon, hôpital Lyon-Sud, 165, chemin du Grand-Revoyet, 69495 Oullins-Pierre-Bénite, France. Electronic address: lucie.gaillot-durand@chu-lyon.fr.