4.7 Review

The potential of artificial intelligence to improve patient safety: a scoping review

Journal

NPJ DIGITAL MEDICINE
Volume 4, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41746-021-00423-6

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research
  2. IBM Watson Health (Cambridge, MA)

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Artificial intelligence (AI) is a valuable tool that can be utilized to improve patient safety by predicting, preventing, and detecting adverse events in healthcare. The literature reviewed in this study highlights numerous examples of AI applications in various harm domains, emphasizing the potential for AI to reduce harm occurrence across all areas, especially in cases where current strategies are not effective.
Artificial intelligence (AI) represents a valuable tool that could be used to improve the safety of care. Major adverse events in healthcare include: healthcare-associated infections, adverse drug events, venous thromboembolism, surgical complications, pressure ulcers, falls, decompensation, and diagnostic errors. The objective of this scoping review was to summarize the relevant literature and evaluate the potential of AI to improve patient safety in these eight harm domains. A structured search was used to query MEDLINE for relevant articles. The scoping review identified studies that described the application of AI for prediction, prevention, or early detection of adverse events in each of the harm domains. The AI literature was narratively synthesized for each domain, and findings were considered in the context of incidence, cost, and preventability to make projections about the likelihood of AI improving safety. Three-hundred and ninety-two studies were included in the scoping review. The literature provided numerous examples of how AI has been applied within each of the eight harm domains using various techniques. The most common novel data were collected using different types of sensing technologies: vital sign monitoring, wearables, pressure sensors, and computer vision. There are significant opportunities to leverage AI and novel data sources to reduce the frequency of harm across all domains. We expect AI to have the greatest impact in areas where current strategies are not effective, and integration and complex analysis of novel, unstructured data are necessary to make accurate predictions; this applies specifically to adverse drug events, decompensation, and diagnostic errors.

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