Artificial Intelligence in Primary Care: Support or Additional Burden on Physicians' Healthcare Work?-A Qualitative Study.

IF 2.2 Q2 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL
Stefanie Mache, Monika Bernburg, Annika Würtenberger, David A Groneberg
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Abstract

Background: Artificial intelligence (AI) is being increasingly promoted as a means to enhance diagnostic accuracy, to streamline workflows, and to improve overall care quality in primary care. However, empirical evidence on how primary care physicians (PCPs) perceive, engage with, and emotionally respond to AI technologies in everyday clinical settings remains limited. Concerns persist regarding AI's usability, transparency, and potential impact on professional identity, workload, and the physician-patient relationship. Methods: This qualitative study investigated the lived experiences and perceptions of 28 PCPs practicing in diverse outpatient settings across Germany. Participants were purposively sampled to ensure variation in age, practice characteristics, and digital proficiency. Data were collected through in-depth, semi-structured interviews, which were audio-recorded, transcribed verbatim, and subjected to rigorous thematic analysis employing Mayring's qualitative content analysis framework. Results: Participants demonstrated a fundamentally ambivalent stance toward AI integration in primary care. Perceived advantages included enhanced diagnostic support, relief from administrative burdens, and facilitation of preventive care. Conversely, physicians reported concerns about workflow disruption due to excessive system prompts, lack of algorithmic transparency, increased cognitive and emotional strain, and perceived threats to clinical autonomy and accountability. The implications for the physician-patient relationship were seen as double-edged: while some believed AI could foster trust through transparent use, others feared depersonalization of care. Crucial prerequisites for successful implementation included transparent and explainable systems, structured training opportunities, clinician involvement in design processes, and seamless integration into clinical routines. Conclusions: Primary care physicians' engagement with AI is marked by cautious optimism, shaped by both perceived utility and significant concerns. Effective and ethically sound implementation requires co-design approaches that embed clinical expertise, ensure algorithmic transparency, and align AI applications with the realities of primary care workflows. Moreover, foundational AI literacy should be incorporated into undergraduate health professional curricula to equip future clinicians with the competencies necessary for responsible and confident use. These strategies are essential to safeguard professional integrity, support clinician well-being, and maintain the humanistic core of primary care.

初级保健中的人工智能:对医生医疗保健工作的支持还是额外负担?-定性研究。
背景:人工智能(AI)作为一种提高诊断准确性、简化工作流程和提高初级保健整体护理质量的手段,正日益得到推广。然而,关于初级保健医生(pcp)如何在日常临床环境中感知、参与和情感上对人工智能技术做出反应的经验证据仍然有限。关于人工智能的可用性、透明度以及对职业身份、工作量和医患关系的潜在影响的担忧仍然存在。方法:本定性研究调查了28名pcp在德国不同门诊设置实践的生活经验和看法。有目的地对参与者进行抽样,以确保年龄、实践特征和数字熟练程度的变化。数据通过深入的半结构化访谈收集,这些访谈被录音,逐字转录,并采用Mayring的定性内容分析框架进行严格的专题分析。结果:参与者对初级保健中的人工智能整合表现出一种根本性的矛盾立场。可感知的优势包括增强诊断支持、减轻行政负担和促进预防性护理。相反,医生报告了由于过度的系统提示、缺乏算法透明度、认知和情绪压力增加以及对临床自主权和问责制的感知威胁而导致的工作流程中断的担忧。这对医患关系的影响被视为一把双刃剑:一些人认为人工智能可以通过透明的使用来培养信任,另一些人则担心护理的去人格化。成功实施的关键先决条件包括透明和可解释的系统、结构化的培训机会、临床医生参与设计过程以及与临床常规的无缝集成。结论:初级保健医生对人工智能的参与表现出谨慎的乐观态度,受到感知效用和重大担忧的影响。有效和合乎道德的实施需要协同设计方法,这些方法要嵌入临床专业知识,确保算法透明度,并使人工智能应用与初级保健工作流程的现实保持一致。此外,应将基本的人工智能知识纳入本科卫生专业课程,使未来的临床医生具备负责任和自信地使用人工智能所需的能力。这些策略对于维护职业操守、支持临床医生的福祉和维持初级保健的人文核心至关重要。
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来源期刊
Clinics and Practice
Clinics and Practice MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL-
CiteScore
2.60
自引率
4.30%
发文量
91
审稿时长
10 weeks
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