Cargando…

Western Australian medical students’ attitudes towards artificial intelligence in healthcare

INTRODUCTION: Surveys conducted internationally have found widespread interest in artificial intelligence (AI) amongst medical students. No similar surveys have been conducted in Western Australia (WA) and it is not known how medical students in WA feel about the use of AI in healthcare or their und...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Stewart, Jonathon, Lu, Juan, Gahungu, Nestor, Goudie, Adrian, Fegan, P. Gerry, Bennamoun, Mohammed, Sprivulis, Peter, Dwivedi, Girish
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10470885/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37651380
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0290642
_version_ 1785099781245239296
author Stewart, Jonathon
Lu, Juan
Gahungu, Nestor
Goudie, Adrian
Fegan, P. Gerry
Bennamoun, Mohammed
Sprivulis, Peter
Dwivedi, Girish
author_facet Stewart, Jonathon
Lu, Juan
Gahungu, Nestor
Goudie, Adrian
Fegan, P. Gerry
Bennamoun, Mohammed
Sprivulis, Peter
Dwivedi, Girish
author_sort Stewart, Jonathon
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Surveys conducted internationally have found widespread interest in artificial intelligence (AI) amongst medical students. No similar surveys have been conducted in Western Australia (WA) and it is not known how medical students in WA feel about the use of AI in healthcare or their understanding of AI. We aim to assess WA medical students’ attitudes towards AI in general, AI in healthcare, and the inclusion of AI education in the medical curriculum. METHODS: A digital survey instrument was developed based on a review of available literature and consultation with subject matter experts. The survey was piloted with a group of medical students and refined based on their feedback. We then sent this anonymous digital survey to all medical students in WA (approximately 1539 students). Responses were open from the 7(th) of September 2021 to the 7(th) of November 2021. Students’ categorical responses were qualitatively analysed, and free text comments from the survey were qualitatively analysed using open coding techniques. RESULTS: Overall, 134 students answered one or more questions (8.9% response rate). The majority of students (82.0%) were 20–29 years old, studying medicine as a postgraduate degree (77.6%), and had started clinical rotations (62.7%). Students were interested in AI (82.6%), self-reported having a basic understanding of AI (84.8%), but few agreed that they had an understanding of the basic computational principles of AI (33.3%) or the limitations of AI (46.2%). Most students (87.5%) had not received teaching in AI. The majority of students (58.6%) agreed that AI should be part of medical training and most (72.7%) wanted more teaching focusing on AI in medicine. Medical students appeared optimistic regarding the role of AI in medicine, with most (74.4%) agreeing with the statement that AI will improve medicine in general. The majority (56.6%) of medical students were not concerned about the impact of AI on their job security as a doctor. Students selected radiology (72.6%), pathology (58.2%), and medical administration (44.8%) as the specialties most likely to be impacted by AI, and psychiatry (61.2%), palliative care (48.5%), and obstetrics and gynaecology (41.0%) as the specialties least likely to be impacted by AI. Qualitative analysis of free text comments identified the use of AI as a tool, and that doctors will not be replaced as common themes. CONCLUSION: Medical students in WA appear to be interested in AI. However, they have not received education about AI and do not feel they understand its basic computational principles or limitations. AI appears to be a current deficit in the medical curriculum in WA, and most students surveyed were supportive of its introduction. These results are consistent with previous surveys conducted internationally.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10470885
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-104708852023-09-01 Western Australian medical students’ attitudes towards artificial intelligence in healthcare Stewart, Jonathon Lu, Juan Gahungu, Nestor Goudie, Adrian Fegan, P. Gerry Bennamoun, Mohammed Sprivulis, Peter Dwivedi, Girish PLoS One Research Article INTRODUCTION: Surveys conducted internationally have found widespread interest in artificial intelligence (AI) amongst medical students. No similar surveys have been conducted in Western Australia (WA) and it is not known how medical students in WA feel about the use of AI in healthcare or their understanding of AI. We aim to assess WA medical students’ attitudes towards AI in general, AI in healthcare, and the inclusion of AI education in the medical curriculum. METHODS: A digital survey instrument was developed based on a review of available literature and consultation with subject matter experts. The survey was piloted with a group of medical students and refined based on their feedback. We then sent this anonymous digital survey to all medical students in WA (approximately 1539 students). Responses were open from the 7(th) of September 2021 to the 7(th) of November 2021. Students’ categorical responses were qualitatively analysed, and free text comments from the survey were qualitatively analysed using open coding techniques. RESULTS: Overall, 134 students answered one or more questions (8.9% response rate). The majority of students (82.0%) were 20–29 years old, studying medicine as a postgraduate degree (77.6%), and had started clinical rotations (62.7%). Students were interested in AI (82.6%), self-reported having a basic understanding of AI (84.8%), but few agreed that they had an understanding of the basic computational principles of AI (33.3%) or the limitations of AI (46.2%). Most students (87.5%) had not received teaching in AI. The majority of students (58.6%) agreed that AI should be part of medical training and most (72.7%) wanted more teaching focusing on AI in medicine. Medical students appeared optimistic regarding the role of AI in medicine, with most (74.4%) agreeing with the statement that AI will improve medicine in general. The majority (56.6%) of medical students were not concerned about the impact of AI on their job security as a doctor. Students selected radiology (72.6%), pathology (58.2%), and medical administration (44.8%) as the specialties most likely to be impacted by AI, and psychiatry (61.2%), palliative care (48.5%), and obstetrics and gynaecology (41.0%) as the specialties least likely to be impacted by AI. Qualitative analysis of free text comments identified the use of AI as a tool, and that doctors will not be replaced as common themes. CONCLUSION: Medical students in WA appear to be interested in AI. However, they have not received education about AI and do not feel they understand its basic computational principles or limitations. AI appears to be a current deficit in the medical curriculum in WA, and most students surveyed were supportive of its introduction. These results are consistent with previous surveys conducted internationally. Public Library of Science 2023-08-31 /pmc/articles/PMC10470885/ /pubmed/37651380 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0290642 Text en © 2023 Stewart et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Stewart, Jonathon
Lu, Juan
Gahungu, Nestor
Goudie, Adrian
Fegan, P. Gerry
Bennamoun, Mohammed
Sprivulis, Peter
Dwivedi, Girish
Western Australian medical students’ attitudes towards artificial intelligence in healthcare
title Western Australian medical students’ attitudes towards artificial intelligence in healthcare
title_full Western Australian medical students’ attitudes towards artificial intelligence in healthcare
title_fullStr Western Australian medical students’ attitudes towards artificial intelligence in healthcare
title_full_unstemmed Western Australian medical students’ attitudes towards artificial intelligence in healthcare
title_short Western Australian medical students’ attitudes towards artificial intelligence in healthcare
title_sort western australian medical students’ attitudes towards artificial intelligence in healthcare
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10470885/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37651380
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0290642
work_keys_str_mv AT stewartjonathon westernaustralianmedicalstudentsattitudestowardsartificialintelligenceinhealthcare
AT lujuan westernaustralianmedicalstudentsattitudestowardsartificialintelligenceinhealthcare
AT gahungunestor westernaustralianmedicalstudentsattitudestowardsartificialintelligenceinhealthcare
AT goudieadrian westernaustralianmedicalstudentsattitudestowardsartificialintelligenceinhealthcare
AT feganpgerry westernaustralianmedicalstudentsattitudestowardsartificialintelligenceinhealthcare
AT bennamounmohammed westernaustralianmedicalstudentsattitudestowardsartificialintelligenceinhealthcare
AT sprivulispeter westernaustralianmedicalstudentsattitudestowardsartificialintelligenceinhealthcare
AT dwivedigirish westernaustralianmedicalstudentsattitudestowardsartificialintelligenceinhealthcare