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AI and Patients’ Rights : Transparency and information flows as situated principles in public health care

Högberg, Charlotte LU orcid and Larsson, Stefan LU (2022) In De Lege 2021. p.401-429
Abstract
The development of artificial intelligence (AI) for medicine and health care is rapidly evolving. However, the automation, scale and data dependency of AI-driven decision-making and decision-support calls for a reassessment of principal ethical and legal norms of transparency, in the light of these novel methodologies. The quality of AI-driven health care, we argue, is depending on it. In this chapter, we provide an overview of novelties that AI in health care bring about, in order to identify key aspects potentially affecting current legal and normative (medical ethical) principles related to transparency and explainability. We develop a conceptual framework on transparency in general and explainability in particular, in relation to AI in... (More)
The development of artificial intelligence (AI) for medicine and health care is rapidly evolving. However, the automation, scale and data dependency of AI-driven decision-making and decision-support calls for a reassessment of principal ethical and legal norms of transparency, in the light of these novel methodologies. The quality of AI-driven health care, we argue, is depending on it. In this chapter, we provide an overview of novelties that AI in health care bring about, in order to identify key aspects potentially affecting current legal and normative (medical ethical) principles related to transparency and explainability. We develop a conceptual framework on transparency in general and explainability in particular, in relation to AI in health care. Further, we analyse principal and normative legal frameworks of patients’ rights relating to transparency and explainability – e.g., right to information, autonomy and privacy – within Sweden and the EU. Doing so, we outline main challenges in the implementation of AI in, primarily public, health care. We argue that there is an interdependency between health care quality and transparency. As transparency is not a binary state, but something that is situated in information practices, it is important to consider what kind of transparency is needed to safeguard the best possible health care. We find that meaningful and contextual transparency and explainability of AI-systems and methodologies is necessary to adhere to the basic principles of normative and legal frameworks of Swedish health care, including patient autonomy. In addition, meaningful and contextual transparency is also a prerequisite for assessing if the best possible care is given to the one most in need. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
and
organization
publishing date
type
Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
publication status
published
subject
keywords
public health care, patient rights, information flows, transparency, AI, AI in medicine, AI-driven decision-making, medical ethics, explainability, right to information, situatedness
host publication
De Lege – Yearbook Uppsala Faculty of Law 2021 : Law, AI & Digitalization - Law, AI & Digitalization
series title
De Lege
editor
de Vries, Katja and Dahlberg, Mattias
volume
2021
pages
28 pages
publisher
Iustus förlag
ISSN
1102-3317
ISBN
978-91-7737-167-0
project
The Automated Administration: Governance of ADM in the public sector
AI-förordningen - mellan fixering och flexibilitet
Medical humanities research node
AIR Lund - Artificially Intelligent use of Registers
Automated decision-making – Nordic perspectives
AI in the Name of the Common Good -
 Relations of data, AI and humans in health and public sector
Mammography Screening with Artificial Intelligence
Lund University AI Research
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
241700df-76f2-4491-8679-5e9932e9b8a1
date added to LUP
2021-12-01 09:28:41
date last changed
2023-11-08 05:33:08
@inbook{241700df-76f2-4491-8679-5e9932e9b8a1,
  abstract     = {{The development of artificial intelligence (AI) for medicine and health care is rapidly evolving. However, the automation, scale and data dependency of AI-driven decision-making and decision-support calls for a reassessment of principal ethical and legal norms of transparency, in the light of these novel methodologies. The quality of AI-driven health care, we argue, is depending on it. In this chapter, we provide an overview of novelties that AI in health care bring about, in order to identify key aspects potentially affecting current legal and normative (medical ethical) principles related to transparency and explainability. We develop a conceptual framework on transparency in general and explainability in particular, in relation to AI in health care. Further, we analyse principal and normative legal frameworks of patients’ rights relating to transparency and explainability – e.g., right to information, autonomy and privacy – within Sweden and the EU. Doing so, we outline main challenges in the implementation of AI in, primarily public, health care. We argue that there is an interdependency between health care quality and transparency. As transparency is not a binary state, but something that is situated in information practices, it is important to consider what kind of transparency is needed to safeguard the best possible health care. We find that meaningful and contextual transparency and explainability of AI-systems and methodologies is necessary to adhere to the basic principles of normative and legal frameworks of Swedish health care, including patient autonomy. In addition, meaningful and contextual transparency is also a prerequisite for assessing if the best possible care is given to the one most in need.}},
  author       = {{Högberg, Charlotte and Larsson, Stefan}},
  booktitle    = {{De Lege – Yearbook Uppsala Faculty of Law 2021 : Law, AI & Digitalization}},
  editor       = {{de Vries, Katja and Dahlberg, Mattias}},
  isbn         = {{978-91-7737-167-0}},
  issn         = {{1102-3317}},
  keywords     = {{public health care; patient rights; information flows; transparency; AI; AI in medicine; AI-driven decision-making; medical ethics; explainability; right to information; situatedness}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{04}},
  pages        = {{401--429}},
  publisher    = {{Iustus förlag}},
  series       = {{De Lege}},
  title        = {{AI and Patients’ Rights : Transparency and information flows as situated principles in public health care}},
  url          = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/117236020/H_gberg_Larsson_2022_AI_and_Patients_Rights.pdf}},
  volume       = {{2021}},
  year         = {{2022}},
}