4.7 Article

Medical Staff and Resident Preferences for Using Deep Learning in Eye Disease Screening: Discrete Choice Experiment

Journal

JOURNAL OF MEDICAL INTERNET RESEARCH
Volume 24, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

JMIR PUBLICATIONS, INC
DOI: 10.2196/40249

Keywords

discrete choice experiment; preference; artificial intelligence; AI; vision health; screening

Funding

  1. Shanghai Public Health Three -Year Action Plan [GWV10.1-XK6]
  2. Science and Technology Commission of Shanghai Municipality [20DZ1100200]
  3. Shanghai Hospital Development Center [SHDC12021613]
  4. Shanghai Eye Disease Control and Treatment Center [20LC01002]
  5. Shanghai Municipal Health Commission [2022HP61]

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This study revealed the preferences of health care service providers and residents for using artificial intelligence (AI) in community-based eye disease screening. The results showed that medical staff preferred high accuracy deep learning models with doctors' involvement, while residents valued doctors' participation and were opposed to AI technology without supervision.
Background: Deep learning-assisted eye disease diagnosis technology is increasingly applied in eye disease screening. However, no research has suggested the prerequisites for health care service providers and residents willing to use it. Objective: The aim of this paper is to reveal the preferences of health care service providers and residents for using artificial intelligence (AI) in community-based eye disease screening, particularly their preference for accuracy. Methods: Discrete choice experiments for health care providers and residents were conducted in Shanghai, China. In total, 34 medical institutions with adequate AI-assisted screening experience participated. A total of 39 medical staff and 318 residents were asked to answer the questionnaire and make a trade-off among alternative screening strategies with different attributes, including missed diagnosis rate, overdiagnosis rate, screening result feedback efficiency, level of ophthalmologist involvement, organizational form, cost, and screening result feedback form. Conditional logit models with the stepwise selection method were used to estimate the preferences. Results: Medical staff preferred high accuracy: The specificity of deep learning models should be more than 90% (odds ratio [OR]=0.61 for 10% overdiagnosis; P<.001), which was much higher than the Food and Drug Administration standards. However, accuracy was not the residents' preference. Rather, they preferred to have the doctors involved in the screening process. In addition, when compared with a fully manual diagnosis, AI technology was more favored by the medical staff (OR=2.08 for semiautomated AI model and OR=2.39 for fully automated AI model; P<.001), while the residents were in disfavor of the AI technology without doctors' supervision (OR=0.24; P<.001). Conclusions: Deep learning model under doctors' supervision is strongly recommended, and the specificity of the model should be more than 90%. In addition, digital transformation should help medical staff move away from heavy and repetitive work and spend more time on communicating with residents.

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