When Artificial Intelligence Models Surpass Physician Performance: Medical Malpractice Liability in an Era of Advanced Artificial Intelligence
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
Artificial Intelligence
Physicians
Malpractice
Humans
Liability, Legal
3. Good health
DOI:
10.1016/j.jacr.2021.11.014
Publication Date:
2022-02-01T17:36:36Z
AUTHORS (3)
ABSTRACT
It seems inevitable that diagnostic and recommender artificial intelligence models will ultimately reach a point when they outperform human clinicians. Just as antibiotics displaced a host of medicinals for treating infections, the superior performance of such models will force their adoption. This article contemplates certain ethical and legal implications bearing on that adoption, especially because they involve a clinician's exposure to allegations of malpractice. The article discusses four relevant considerations: (1) the imperative of using explainable artificial intelligence models in clinical care, (2) specific strategies for diminishing liability when a clinician agrees or disagrees with a model's findings or recommendations but the patient nevertheless experiences a poor outcome, (3) relieving liability through legislation or regulation, and (4) comprehending such models as "persons" and therefore as potential defendants in legal proceedings. We conclude with observations on clinician-vendor relationships and argue that, although advanced artificial intelligence models have not yet arrived, clinicians must begin considering their implications now.
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