The promise of artificial intelligence in health: Portrayals of emerging healthcare technologies.
Ash WatsonVaughan Wozniak-O'ConnorPublished in: Sociology of health & illness (2024)
Emerging technologies of artificial intelligence (AI) and automated decision-making (ADM) promise to advance many industries. Healthcare is a key locus for new developments, where operational improvements are magnified by the bigger-picture promise of improved care and outcomes for patients. Forming the zeitgeist of contemporary sociotechnical innovation in healthcare, media portrayals of these technologies can shape how they are implemented, experienced and understood across healthcare systems. This article identifies current applications of AI and ADM within Australian healthcare contexts and analyses how these technologies are being portrayed within news and industry media. It offers a categorisation of leading applications of AI and ADM: monitoring and tracking, data management and analysis, cloud computing, and robotics. Discussing how AI and ADM are depicted in relation to health and care practices, it examines the sense of promise that is enlivened in these representations. The article concludes by considering the implications of promissory discourses for how technologies are understood and integrated into practices and sites of healthcare.
Keyphrases
- healthcare
- artificial intelligence
- big data
- machine learning
- deep learning
- end stage renal disease
- public health
- newly diagnosed
- primary care
- working memory
- chronic kidney disease
- ejection fraction
- dna methylation
- palliative care
- risk assessment
- affordable care act
- gene expression
- electronic health record
- genome wide
- high throughput
- insulin resistance
- social media