Dies ist eine Übersichtsseite mit Metadaten zu dieser wissenschaftlichen Arbeit. Der vollständige Artikel ist beim Verlag verfügbar.
Comparing artificial intelligence- vs clinician-authored summaries of simulated primary care electronic health records
3
Zitationen
12
Autoren
2025
Jahr
Abstract
Objective: To compare clinical summaries generated from simulated patient primary care electronic health records (EHRs) by GPT-4, to summaries generated by clinicians on multiple domains of quality including utility, concision, accuracy, and bias. Materials and Methods: Seven primary care physicians generated 70 simulated patient EHR notes, each representing 10 patient contacts with the practice over at least 2 years. Each record was summarized by a different clinician and by GPT-4. artificial intelligence (AI)- and clinician-authored summaries were rated blind by clinicians according to 8 domains of quality and an overall rating. Results: = .02), but with greater variability in clinician-authored summary ratings. AI and clinician-authored summaries had similar accuracy and AI-authored summaries were less likely to omit important information and more likely to use patient-friendly language. Discussion: Although AI-authored summaries were rated slightly lower overall compared with clinician-authored summaries, they demonstrated similar accuracy and greater consistency. This demonstrates potential applications for generating summaries in primary care, particularly given the substantial time taken for clinicians to undertake this work. Conclusion: The results suggest the feasibility, utility and acceptability of using AI-authored summaries to integrate into EHRs to support clinicians in primary care. AI summarization tools have the potential to improve healthcare productivity, including by enabling clinicians to spend more time on direct patient care.
Ähnliche Arbeiten
Machine Learning in Medicine
2019 · 3.751 Zit.
Systematic Review: Impact of Health Information Technology on Quality, Efficiency, and Costs of Medical Care
2006 · 3.173 Zit.
Effects of Computerized Clinical Decision Support Systems on Practitioner Performance and Patient Outcomes
2005 · 2.967 Zit.
Studies in health technology and informatics
2008 · 2.903 Zit.
An overview of clinical decision support systems: benefits, risks, and strategies for success
2020 · 2.706 Zit.