2018
DOI: 10.4414/smw.2018.14571
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Digital health: meeting the ethical and policy challenges

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Cited by 97 publications
(82 citation statements)
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“…In addition, as digital health entails new forms of communication (eg, virtual consultations, email, chatbots), it is imperative for health care workers to be able to relate information accurately yet efficiently, timely, and delicately to patients, colleagues, and other collaborating stakeholders [ 68 ]. Furthermore, the rise in the adoption and utilization of digital technologies has spurred new issues relating to the use of IT [ 69 ], which corresponds to the next two common domains of competencies (ie, ethics, legal, or regulations, and privacy and security). These domains stress the importance of health care workers’ adherence to legal and regulatory requirements and to keep up to date with privacy and security policies pertaining to the appropriate use of digital technologies.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In addition, as digital health entails new forms of communication (eg, virtual consultations, email, chatbots), it is imperative for health care workers to be able to relate information accurately yet efficiently, timely, and delicately to patients, colleagues, and other collaborating stakeholders [ 68 ]. Furthermore, the rise in the adoption and utilization of digital technologies has spurred new issues relating to the use of IT [ 69 ], which corresponds to the next two common domains of competencies (ie, ethics, legal, or regulations, and privacy and security). These domains stress the importance of health care workers’ adherence to legal and regulatory requirements and to keep up to date with privacy and security policies pertaining to the appropriate use of digital technologies.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For now, suffice to say that a traditional thematic review methodology (following Abdul, Vermeulen, Wang, Lim, & Kankanhalli, 2018) was used to find literature from across disciplinary boundaries that highlighted ethical issues unique to the use of AI algorithms in healthcare. This means that the review did not focus on issues such as lack of evidence, privacy and security (Vayena, Tobias, Afua, & Allesandro, 2018), or definitions and secondary uses of healthcare data, as these are ethical issues for digital health at large and not unique to AI. More detailed discussion of these issues is highlighted in To ensure that the focus stayed on the unique ethical issues, the map, developed by (Mittelstadt et al, 2016), of the epistemic, normative, and overarching ethical concerns related to algorithms was used as a base.…”
Section: Methodology In Briefmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For now, suffice to say that a traditional thematic review methodology (following Abdul, Vermeulen, Wang, Lim, & Kankanhalli, 2018) was used to find literature from across disciplinary boundaries that highlighted ethical issues unique to the use of AI algorithms in healthcare. This means that the review did not focus on issues such as lack of evidence, privacy and security (Vayena, Tobias, Afua, & Allesandro, 2018), or definitions and secondary uses of healthcare data, as these are ethical issues for digital health at large and not unique to AI. More detailed discussion of these issues is highlighted in Table 1.…”
Section: Methodology In Briefmentioning
confidence: 99%