r -AI放射技师:一项关于人工智能对专业身份、职业和放射技师角色的感知影响的欧洲调查。

IF 4.1 2区 医学 Q1 RADIOLOGY, NUCLEAR MEDICINE & MEDICAL IMAGING
Nikolaos Stogiannos, Gemma Walsh, Benard Ohene-Botwe, Kevin McHugh, Ben Potts, Winnie Tam, Chris O'Sullivan, Anton Sheahan Quinsten, Christopher Gibson, Rodrigo Garcia Gorga, David Sipos, Elona Dybeli, Moreno Zanardo, Cláudia Sá Dos Reis, Nejc Mekis, Carst Buissink, Andrew England, Charlotte Beardmore, Altino Cunha, Amanda Goodall, Janice St John-Matthews, Mark McEntee, Yiannis Kyratsis, Christina Malamateniou
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:放射技师使用先进的医学成像和放疗(MIRT)设备。他们也是医疗保健领域数字成熟且具有数字弹性的劳动力。人工智能已经改变了他们在数据采集、后处理和工作流程管理方面的临床实践和角色。因此,了解人工智能对放射技师的职业、角色和专业身份的影响至关重要,因为放射技师是医疗成像生态系统中医疗保健数字化转型的关键利益相关者。方法:一项由欧洲放射技师协会联合会(EFRS)批准的欧洲放射技师调查在网上发布。它由12名放射技师驾驶,并被翻译成8种语言。虽然本研究包括定性和定量结果,但本文强调的是定量方面。结果:共有来自37个不同国家的2206名欧洲放射技师回应。尽管对劳动力技能、未来职业身份和就业前景存在一些担忧,但参与者对人工智能在医疗保健领域的应用总体持乐观态度。对于那些受过人工智能教育的人来说,这一点尤其明显(平均:2.15 vs. 1.89;p值:< 0.001),人工智能实践经验(相关性:0.047;p值:0.038),来自数字素养较高的国家(平均值:2.00 vs.1.93;p值:0.027)和较高的放射学教育水平(平均值:3.28 vs. 3.15;假定值:0.002)。男性似乎对技术技能的发展更感兴趣,而女性则对以病人为中心的护理技能的磨练更感兴趣。最后,跨专业合作被认为不仅对人工智能的无缝临床整合至关重要,而且对支持患者利益也至关重要。结论:在人工智能实施取得进展的同时,人工智能教育需要跟上步伐,以确保医疗专业人员对该技术的接受、信任和安全使用,最大限度地减少他们对专业角色变化的担忧,并使他们能够看到服务转型的机会。关键相关性声明:本文旨在绘制人工智能对欧洲放射技师的专业身份和职业的感知影响。重点:人工智能正在影响放射技师的临床实践,改变他们的职业身份。尽管人工智能意识不断增强,但整个欧洲仍缺乏人工智能教育。人工智能教育是放射技师接受和信任人工智能的关键,有助于人工智能的实施和服务转型。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
R-AI-diographers: a European survey on perceived impact of AI on professional identity, careers, and radiographers' roles.

Objectives: Radiographers use advanced medical imaging and radiotherapy (MIRT) equipment. They are also a digitally mature and digitally resilient workforce in healthcare. Artificial intelligence is already changing their clinical practice and roles in data acquisition, post-processing, and workflow management. It is therefore vital to understand the impact of AI on the careers, roles and professional identity of radiographers, as key stakeholders of the digital transformation of healthcare within the medical imaging ecosystem.

Methods: A European radiographer survey, endorsed by the European Federation of Radiographer Societies (EFRS), was distributed online. It was piloted with twelve radiographers and translated into eight languages. Although this study included both qualitative and quantitative results, this paper emphasises the quantitative aspect.

Results: A total of 2206 European radiographers have responded from 37 different countries. Despite some concerns around workforce deskilling, future professional identity, and job prospects, participants showed overall optimistic views about the use of AI in healthcare. This was particularly strong for those with prior AI education (mean: 2.15 vs. 1.89; p-value: < 0.001), hands-on experience with AI (correlation: 0.047; p-value: 0.038), from countries with higher digital literacy (mean: 2.00 vs.1.93; p-value: 0.027) and a higher academic level of radiography education (mean: 3.28 vs. 3.15; p-value: 0.002). Men appeared slightly more enthused about the development of technological skills and women about the honing of patient-centred care skills. Finally, interprofessional collaboration was seen as essential not only for the seamless clinical integration of AI but also for supporting patient benefit.

Conclusion: While AI implementation advances, AI education needs to keep at pace to ensure acceptability, trust, and safe use of this technology by healthcare professionals, minimising their concerns around professional role changes and enabling them to see the opportunities of service transformation.

Critical relevance statement: This paper aims to map out the perceived impact of AI on the professional identity and careers of European radiographers.

Key points: AI is impacting radiographers' clinical practice and changing their professional identity. Despite increasing AI awareness, AI education is still lacking across Europe. AI education is key for AI acceptability and trust by radiographers, which facilitates AI implementation and service transformation.

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来源期刊
Insights into Imaging
Insights into Imaging Medicine-Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and Imaging
CiteScore
7.30
自引率
4.30%
发文量
182
审稿时长
13 weeks
期刊介绍: Insights into Imaging (I³) is a peer-reviewed open access journal published under the brand SpringerOpen. All content published in the journal is freely available online to anyone, anywhere! I³ continuously updates scientific knowledge and progress in best-practice standards in radiology through the publication of original articles and state-of-the-art reviews and opinions, along with recommendations and statements from the leading radiological societies in Europe. Founded by the European Society of Radiology (ESR), I³ creates a platform for educational material, guidelines and recommendations, and a forum for topics of controversy. A balanced combination of review articles, original papers, short communications from European radiological congresses and information on society matters makes I³ an indispensable source for current information in this field. I³ is owned by the ESR, however authors retain copyright to their article according to the Creative Commons Attribution License (see Copyright and License Agreement). All articles can be read, redistributed and reused for free, as long as the author of the original work is cited properly. The open access fees (article-processing charges) for this journal are kindly sponsored by ESR for all Members. The journal went open access in 2012, which means that all articles published since then are freely available online.
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