Курс доступен
This course builds upon the WHO guidance and adapted introductory online course Ethics and Governance of Artificial Intelligence for Health, aiming to guide programmers, designers, data scientists and principal investigators in integrating ethical considerations and effective governance frameworks throughout the full artificial intelligence (AI) lifecycle. The course follows a case-based approach focusing on a use case that explores enhancing access to cervical cancer screening for undocumented migrant women using an AI tool. Modules cover ethical considerations from data collection to the deployment and maintenance of the AI tool. The course emphasises the significance of informed consent, explores strategies to implement risk-based approaches, and delves into the notions of autonomy and accountability. Through interactive learning, participants gain practical insights into responsible AI design, development, deployment, and maintenance, ensuring the right balance between innovation and healthcare benefits.
Photo credit: Getty Images / miriam-doerr & WHO / Blink Media - Etinosa Yvonne
Artificial intelligence (AI) has enormous potential for strengthening the delivery of healthcare and medicine and helping countries achieve universal health coverage. For AI to have a beneficial impact on public health and medicine, considerations of ethics and human rights must guide decisions made in all phases of the design, development, deployment, and maintenance of AI tools for health. New approaches to software engineering arising in the past decade have moved beyond an appeal to abstract moral values, and improvements in design methods are not merely upgraded programming techniques. Methods have been developed to support the effective, systematic, and transparent integration of ethical values in tool design.
This is a follow-on course to the WHO introductory online course Ethics and governance of artificial intelligence for health, which builds upon the guidance published by WHO in 2021 under the same name.
This course aims to (a) trace steps that should be taken to ensure that AI tools designed, developed and tested are used for the benefit of patients and providers when implemented, (b) facilitate learning through a case-based approach to elicit participants to make, support and defend value-based decisions in all phases of the AI lifecycle and (c) ensure that participants are aware of the broader ethical obligations that must be satisfied by other individuals and entities that participate in the AI tool lifecycle.
This new curriculum offers the flexibility of being pursued independently or in conjunction with the introductory online learning already available. For a comprehensive and enriching educational journey, we recommend completing the introductory course before enrolling in this one.
Throughout this course, we will present a case study that focuses on demonstrating how an AI tool has the potential to increase access to cervical cancer screening for undocumented migrant women facing limited access to care in the fictional high-income country Profectus, as well as for women across other high or middle- to low- income countries and areas with similar limitations. By adopting a case-based methodology, we will systematically explore ethical considerations and emphasise challenges and ways to address them.
The course will take approximately 2.5 hours to complete.
A Confirmation of Participation certificate is offered at the end of the course.
A Record of Achievement certificate will also be available to participants who score at least 80% in the final assessment.
Participants who receive a Record of Achievement can also download an Open Badge for this course. Click here to learn how.