Physicians are embracing clinical GenAI—in theory, at least

More than two-thirds of U.S. physicians have changed their minds about generative AI over the past year. In doing so, the re-thinkers have raised their level of trust in the technology to help improve healthcare.

That’s according to a survey of 100 medical doctors who work in a large hospital or health system, see patients and use clinical decision-support software. The survey was conducted online in February by Wolters Kluwer Health.

The researchers further found 40% of U.S. physicians ready to use “point-of-care GenAI” as long as they’re confident in the specific tool they have in hand for the purpose.

In reporting the results, Wolters Kluwer Health offers four key observations:

  1. Saving time is an eagerly anticipated benefit among physicians who would be willing to use GenAI at the point of care.
     
    • More than two-thirds of physicians (68%) say GenAI can save time by quickly searching medical literature.
       
    • 59% say GenAI can save time by summarizing data about a patient in the electronic health record (EHR).
       
    • More than half (54%) believe GenAI will save them 20% or more time looking for data to assist in clinical decision-making.
       
  2. Physicians view GenAI as a tool that can help optimize the work of care teams.
     
    • 4 out of 5 of physicians (81%) say GenAI can improve care team interactions with patients.
       
    • More than half say GenAI can support continuing education (57%) and day-to-day tasks (56%).
       
    • Almost half (46%) say GenAI can coordinate scheduling across the care team to facilitate timely care.
       
  3. The most important criteria for physicians is content source transparency.
     
    • For the majority of physicians (58%), the No. 1 most important factor when selecting a GenAI tool is knowing the content it is trained on was created by medical professionals.
       
    • Before using GenAI in clinical decisions, 9 out of 10 physicians (91%) would have to know the materials it sourced from were created by doctors and medical experts.
       
    • 89% would be more likely to use GenAI in clinical decision-making if the vendor was transparent about where information came from, who created it and how it was sourced.
       
    • 76% would be more comfortable using GenAI from established vendors.
       
  4. A gap persists between physician preparedness and patient readiness for GenAI in healthcare.
     
    • Compared to results from Wolters Kluwer Health’s 2023 consumer survey “Generative AI in Healthcare: Gaining Consumer Trust,” physicians are more ready for GenAI in healthcare than their patients.
       
    • The majority (66%) of physicians believe their patients would be confident in their results if they knew their provider was using GenAI to make decisions about their care, but almost half (48%) of Americans would not be confident in the results.
       
    • While only 1 out of 5 physicians believe patients would be concerned about the use of GenAI in a diagnosis, most Americans (80%) say they would be concerned.

“Physicians are open to using generative AI in a clinical setting provided that applications are useful and trustworthy,” comments Peter Bonis, MD, Wolters Kluwer Health’s chief medical officer, in a news release. “The source of content and transparency are key considerations.”

Read the release here and view an infographic here.

 

 

Dave Pearson

Dave P. has worked in journalism, marketing and public relations for more than 30 years, frequently concentrating on hospitals, healthcare technology and Catholic communications. He has also specialized in fundraising communications, ghostwriting for CEOs of local, national and global charities, nonprofits and foundations.

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