AIMC Topic: Ethics, Medical

Clear Filters Showing 11 to 20 of 65 articles

Physicians' ethical concerns about artificial intelligence in medicine: a qualitative study: .

Frontiers in public health
BACKGROUND/AIM: Artificial Intelligence (AI) is the capability of computational systems to perform tasks that require human-like cognitive functions, such as reasoning, learning, and decision-making. Unlike human intelligence, AI does not involve sen...

Should Doctor Robot possess moral empathy?

Bioethics
Critics of clinical artificial intelligence (AI) suggest that the technology is ethically harmful because it may lead to the dehumanization of the doctor-patient relationship (DPR) by eliminating moral empathy, which is viewed as a distinctively huma...

[Ethics of AI in medicine].

Deutsche medizinische Wochenschrift (1946)
Artificial intelligence (AI) is increasingly finding its way into medicine, and it is not yet clear how it will change the practice of medicine and the way doctors see themselves. This article explores the ethical limits of AI by (1) discussing the r...

Take five? A coherentist argument why medical AI does not require a new ethical principle.

Theoretical medicine and bioethics
With the growing application of machine learning models in medicine, principlist bioethics has been put forward as needing revision. This paper reflects on the dominant trope in AI ethics to include a new 'principle of explicability' alongside the tr...

The Ethical Stewardship of Artificial Intelligence in Chronic Pain and Headache: A Narrative Review.

Current pain and headache reports
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: As artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML) are becoming more pervasive in medicine, understanding their ethical considerations for chronic pain and headache management is crucial for optimizing their safety.

Medical AI: is trust really the issue?

Journal of medical ethics
I discuss an influential argument put forward by Hatherley in the Drawing on influential philosophical accounts of interpersonal trust, Hatherley claims that medical artificial intelligence is capable of being reliable, but not trustworthy. Furtherm...