While AI is increasingly considered a key part of healthcare’s future, there are still many unanswered questions about how exactly the technology should be implemented in a way that is ethical and engenders trust among providers and patients.
As part of an effort to help determine best practices and standards for AI technology, the Consumer Technology Association (CTA) has launched a new initiative that will include digital health companies like Fitbit, Google and IBM, as well as industry groups and nonprofits including AdvaMed, the American Telemedicine Association and the Brookings Institution.
According to a statement announcing the initiative, CTA’s working group, which includes more than 30 different organizations, is an effort to bring stakeholders together to create common understanding around AI definitions, proper data management and ethical considerations like bias and privacy.
“AI will boost our wellness and health care by improving outcomes, expanding treatment options and providing cost-cutting efficiencies,” CTA President and CEO Gary Shapiro. “We must seize the opportunity to realize the potential of AI ethically, strategically and with clear goals.”
The group will be co-chaired by executives at Philips and remote monitoring startup CarePredict and meet at the organization’s Technology & Standards Spring Forum next month.
Justin Barad, the CEO of member company Osso VR, applauded the efforts of CTA to include both large and small companies in its effort to improve innovation within healthcare.
“AI is becoming ubiquitous in healthcare technologies yet we currently lack standards to describe, validate and most importantly trust it,” Barad said. “As a healthcare technology startup utilizing AI, Osso VR is proud to be a part of the conversation to make sure that our industry moves in a unified and positive direction towards incorporating these technologies in order bring value to our patients.
The CTA working group shares many characteristics with the Alliance for Artificial Intelligence in Healthcare which officially launched at this year’s J.P. Morgan Healthcare Conference.
That organization – which has a membership roster mainly made of up of biopharma companies – also has a stated intention to establish industry standards for AI, while setting clear expectations for the technology’s potential and working with regulatory bodies to help usher in regulations that can help drive AI adoption.
Other participants in the CTA working group include BlackBerry, the Brookings Institution, the Connected Health Initiative and the Federation of State Medical Boards.