Is Consent-GPT valid? Public attitudes to generative AI use in surgical consent.

IF 4.7 Q2 COMPUTER SCIENCE, ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE
AI & Society Pub Date : 2026-03-01 Epub Date: 2025-10-09 DOI:10.1007/s00146-025-02644-9
Jemima Winifred Allen, Ivar Rodríguez Hannikainen, Julian Savulescu, Dominic Wilkinson, Brian David Earp
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Healthcare systems often delegate surgical consent-seeking to members of the treating team other than the surgeon (e.g., junior doctors in the UK and Australia). Yet, little is known about public attitudes toward this practice compared to emerging AI-supported options. This first large-scale empirical study examines how laypeople evaluate the validity and liability risks of using an AI-supported surgical consent system (Consent-GPT). We randomly assigned 376 UK participants (demographically representative for age, ethnicity, and gender) to evaluate identical transcripts of surgical consent interviews framed as being conducted by either Consent-GPT, a junior doctor, or the treating surgeon. Participants broadly agreed that AI-supported consent was valid (87.6% agreement), but rated it significantly lower than consent sought solely by human clinicians (treating surgeon: 97.6% agreement; junior doctor: 96.2%). Participants expressed substantially lower satisfaction with AI-supported consent compared to human-only processes (Consent-GPT: 59.5% satisfied; treating surgeon 96.8%; junior doctor: 93.1%), despite identical consent interactions (i.e., the same informational content and display format). Regarding justification to sue the hospital following a complication, participants were slightly more inclined to support legal action in response to AI-supported consent than human-only consent. However, the strongest predictor was proper risk disclosure, not the consent-seeking agent. As AI integration in healthcare accelerates, these results highlight critical considerations for implementation strategies, suggesting that a hybrid approach to consent delegation that leverages AI's information sharing capabilities while preserving meaningful human engagement may be more acceptable to patients than an otherwise identical process with relatively less human-to-human interaction.

同意- gpt有效吗?公众对在手术同意中使用生成人工智能的态度。
医疗保健系统通常将征求手术同意的工作委托给治疗团队的成员,而不是外科医生(例如,英国和澳大利亚的初级医生)。然而,与新兴的人工智能支持的选择相比,公众对这种做法的态度知之甚少。这是第一次大规模的实证研究,探讨了外行人如何评估使用人工智能支持的手术同意系统(consent - gpt)的有效性和责任风险。我们随机分配了376名英国参与者(在年龄、种族和性别上具有人口统计学代表性)来评估由同意- gpt、初级医生或治疗外科医生进行的手术同意访谈的相同转录本。参与者普遍同意人工智能支持的同意是有效的(87.6%同意),但对其的评价明显低于人类临床医生(治疗外科医生:97.6%同意;初级医生:96.2%)。尽管相同的同意交互(即相同的信息内容和显示格式),参与者对人工智能支持的同意的满意度明显低于人工流程(同意- gpt: 59.5%满意;治疗外科医生:96.8%;初级医生:93.1%)。关于并发症发生后起诉医院的理由,参与者更倾向于支持对人工智能支持的同意采取法律行动,而不是只有人类同意。然而,最有力的预测因素是适当的风险披露,而不是征求同意的代理人。随着人工智能在医疗保健中的整合加速,这些结果突出了实施策略的关键考虑因素,表明一种利用人工智能的信息共享能力,同时保持有意义的人类参与的混合同意授权方法,可能比其他相同的过程更容易被患者接受,人与人之间的互动相对较少。
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来源期刊
AI & Society
AI & Society COMPUTER SCIENCE, ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE-
CiteScore
8.00
自引率
20.00%
发文量
257
期刊介绍: AI & Society: Knowledge, Culture and Communication, is an International Journal publishing refereed scholarly articles, position papers, debates, short communications, and reviews of books and other publications. Established in 1987, the Journal focuses on societal issues including the design, use, management, and policy of information, communications and new media technologies, with a particular emphasis on cultural, social, cognitive, economic, ethical, and philosophical implications. AI & Society has a broad scope and is strongly interdisciplinary. We welcome contributions and participation from researchers and practitioners in a variety of fields including information technologies, humanities, social sciences, arts and sciences. This includes broader societal and cultural impacts, for example on governance, security, sustainability, identity, inclusion, working life, corporate and community welfare, and well-being of people. Co-authored articles from diverse disciplines are encouraged. AI & Society seeks to promote an understanding of the potential, transformative impacts and critical consequences of pervasive technology for societies. Technological innovations, including new sciences such as biotech, nanotech and neuroscience, offer a great potential for societies, but also pose existential risk. Rooted in the human-centred tradition of science and technology, the Journal acts as a catalyst, promoter and facilitator of engagement with diversity of voices and over-the-horizon issues of arts, science, technology and society. AI & Society expects that, in keeping with the ethos of the journal, submissions should provide a substantial and explicit argument on the societal dimension of research, particularly the benefits, impacts and implications for society. This may include factors such as trust, biases, privacy, reliability, responsibility, and competence of AI systems. Such arguments should be validated by critical comment on current research in this area. Curmudgeon Corner will retain its opinionated ethos. The journal is in three parts: a) full length scholarly articles; b) strategic ideas, critical reviews and reflections; c) Student Forum is for emerging researchers and new voices to communicate their ongoing research to the wider academic community, mentored by the Journal Advisory Board; Book Reviews and News; Curmudgeon Corner for the opinionated. Papers in the Original Section may include original papers, which are underpinned by theoretical, methodological, conceptual or philosophical foundations. The Open Forum Section may include strategic ideas, critical reviews and potential implications for society of current research. Network Research Section papers make substantial contributions to theoretical and methodological foundations within societal domains. These will be multi-authored papers that include a summary of the contribution of each author to the paper. Original, Open Forum and Network papers are peer reviewed. The Student Forum Section may include theoretical, methodological, and application orientations of ongoing research including case studies, as well as, contextual action research experiences. Papers in this section are normally single-authored and are also formally reviewed. Curmudgeon Corner is a short opinionated column on trends in technology, arts, science and society, commenting emphatically on issues of concern to the research community and wider society. Normal word length: Original and Network Articles 10k, Open Forum 8k, Student Forum 6k, Curmudgeon 1k. The exception to the co-author limit of Original and Open Forum (4), Network (10), Student (3) and Curmudgeon (2) articles will be considered for their special contributions. Please do not send your submissions by email but use the "Submit manuscript" button. NOTE TO AUTHORS: The Journal expects its authors to include, in their submissions: a) An acknowledgement of the pre-accept/pre-publication versions of their manuscripts on non-commercial and academic sites. b) Images: obtain permissions from the copyright holder/original sources. c) Formal permission from their ethics committees when conducting studies with people.
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