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Nurses need not fear AI | AI news watcher’s blog | Partner news

Friday, October 4, 2024
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Nurses and AI artificial intelligence

4 ways to help nurses make friends with algorithms

Nurses tend to feel optimistic if not exactly excited about AI’s advances into their profession. Those who hold back tend to share a common concern—sacrificing care quality for the sake of tech-enabled efficiency. 

Market analysts at McKinsey name this among the top findings to shake out of a survey of more than 7,000 nurses conducted in partnership with the American Nurses Foundation. 

The project report suggests some steps that nursing and hospital leaders can take toward melding nurses’ irreplaceable contributions with AI’s promising applications. 

1. To encourage nurses’ buy-in, actively listen to nurses’ concerns. 

Health system leaders and AI developers would to well to “consider nurses’ concerns about the quality of patient care,” the authors write, stressing that nurses are, after all, on healthcare’s frontline. Asking the surveyed field what it is about AI that makes them uneasy, McKinsey found: 

The largest share of respondents, 61%, report trust in accuracy as a top three concern; 49% are most concerned about the lack of human interaction; and 36% point to a lack of knowledge on how to use AI-based technology and tools.

2. Involve nurses in AI development. 

To create AI tools that are informed by and solve for varied clinical care concerns, AI developers and healthcare administrators can partner with nurses on development and testing, the analysts comment. Furthermore, they add, nursing experts can be involved in AI governance and oversight. When asked what was most needed to alleviate concerns:

Some 73% of respondents suggested having nursing input into the design and optimization of AI tools. Evidence of AI’s effectiveness on quality and patient safety, as well as clear guidelines and regulations on AI use, were also named top requirements among surveyed nurses (69% for each).

3. Position AI as the workload-relieving tool that it can surely be. 

In 2023, McKinsey and the American Nurses Foundation evaluated how nurses were spending their time and estimated that roughly 20 percent of a nurse’s shift could be freed up through technology, the analysts report. “As AI advances at a breakneck pace,” they remark, “surveyed nurses acknowledge the support these tools could provide.” More: 

The share of respondents to our latest survey who say they’d like to see more AI tools incorporated into their work is 64%. This enthusiasm is consistent across all age bands but is slightly higher, at 71%, among nurses aged 30 to 39. 

4. Emphasize AI’s potential to improve care quality without sacrificing human interactions. 

When asked how the idea of working with AI makes them feel, 42% report being hopeful that quality will improve, but 23% say they are uncomfortable about what AI could mean for patient care, the report authors report before adding:  

Possible ways to address this concern could be better demonstration of the quality of AI-supported interventions, thoughtful consideration about how AI tools can work in conjunction with human interaction, and strengthened education on AI for nurses and care team members.

Many stakeholders seem eager to hasten the day when AI is much more widely used in care settings than it is today, the authors note. However, they add, “it is critical to have leadership, insight and feedback from healthcare’s largest workforce—nurses—to ensure that high-quality patient care remains the priority across all care settings.”

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Industry Watcher’s Digest

Buzzworthy developments of the past few days.

  • Last year saw the publication of more than 22,500 peer-reviewed papers involving biomedical applications of AI. In a time of big numbers, that’s just one more. But looked at in context, it tells a compelling true tale. In 2021, the year before ChatGPT injected generative AI into the world’s technological vein, PubMed’s count in the category was (an already impressive) 12,621. The bounce was more than 75%. Even as far into the new AI age as 2021, fewer than 8,000 papers appeared. The observation is from San Fran-based Bessemer Venture Partners. In a new report, the firm calls healthcare AI an overnight success 80 years in the making. “While the hype might seem like a repeat of past waves of short-lived techno-optimism in healthcare,” the authors comment, “the data tells a different story.” 
     
  • Dental and vision providers want ‘in’ on AI for relief from billing and administrative headaches. That comes clear in a report from Skygen, which supplies benefits management services to those segments of U.S. healthcare. Surveying 201 dentists and optometrists/ophthalmologists, the company found 56% exploring AI options and 35% already implementing the technology in their practices. What’s more, respondents “expressed little to no major concerns about AI integration,” collectively citing utilization management (90%) and claims adjudication (87%) as the ripest areas for AI-driven automation. 
     
  • A ‘more nuanced’ understanding of value is soon to emerge. It’s rising from below as AI continues uncovering unseen patterns in unconnected data. That’s the view of two thought influencers whose take on the promise of AI in healthcare is posted in the American Journal of Managed Care. The unfurling interpretation of value set up by AI is “critical as healthcare systems worldwide grapple with escalating costs and the need for sustainable healthcare systems,” write Jason Spangler, MD, MPH, of the Center for Innovation & Value Research and John Nosta of the Nostalab think tank. It’s a quick and decent read.
     
  • Deep fakes are more dangerous to healthcare than we may have thought. To comprehend the risk, consider the trusted method of checking with apparent senders of phishy email before clicking any link or attachment. That doesn’t work so well when AI can persuasively pretend to be the person you know. For another, well, this is healthcare—one of cybercriminals’ favorite targets. “Today criminals will go so far as to schedule Teams calls using impersonations,” warns Anahi Santiago, chief information security officer at ChristianaCare. “[T]hey’re on video, and they look exactly like the person you would normally engage with on video.” Santiago made the comments for Healthcare IT News and will speak at the HIMSS 2024 Healthcare Cybersecurity Forum, which is slated to hit Washington, D.C., on Halloween Day. 
     
  • Whether or not AI can come up with truly new ways of thinking remains to be seen. It also remains unlikely, adds the human thinking researcher Keith Holyoak, PhD, of the psychology department at UCLA. “Machines are not truly autonomous,” says Holyoak, who also happens to be a poet. “Unprompted, a large language model does nothing at all.” Yes, but, when wielded by a human, AI—like many other technological advances—can “allow people to do things that would otherwise be impossible.” Q&A here
     
  • That’s reassuring, Professor. But have you heard about causal AI? That’s the name they’re giving to AI that evidences the “actual ability to reason, problem-solve, understand cause and effect.” The words are from Scott Hebner, principal analyst of AI at theCUBE Research (formerly Wikibon) in Silicon Valley. He expects causal AI will mesh with small language models to form a “cohesive machine learning architecture.” Heady stuff. Hear him out in a 20-minute video posted by SiliconAnglehere
     
  • Robot bosses make better taskmasters. When their fake minds are powered by real AI, at least. Then they’re more cost effective than their human counterparts. They make more rational decisions too. They accurately forecast your future performance. They never sleep. Need we go on? Tech writer Zac Amos fleshes out the downsides or AI bosses as well as these upsides in a piece published by Unite.AI. The upshot: “AI may not replace your boss, but it could help them do a better job.” 
     
  • Recent research in the news: 
     
  • Healthcare AI mergers & acquisitions:
     
  • Funding news of note:
     
  • From AIin.Healthcare’s news partners:
     

 

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