Artificial intelligence in healthcare: Proposals for policy development in South Africa

South African Journal of Bioethics and Law:11-16 (forthcoming)
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Abstract

Despite the tremendous promise offered by artificial intelligence (AI) for healthcare in South Africa, existing policy frameworks are inadequate for encouraging innovation in this field. Practical, concrete and solution-driven policy recommendations are needed to encourage the creation and use of AI systems. This article considers five distinct problematic issues which call for policy development: (i) outdated legislation; (ii) data and algorithmic bias; (iii) the impact on the healthcare workforce; (iv) the imposition of liability dilemma; and (v) a lack of innovation and development of AI systems for healthcare in South Africa. The adoption of a national policy framework that addresses these issues directly is imperative to ensure the uptake of AI development and deployment for healthcare in a safe, responsible and regulated manner.

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Author Profiles

Seelan Naidoo
University of Stellenbosch
Meshandren Naidoo
University of KwaZulu-Natal

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