AI technologies offer new opportunities to improve surgery but there is a growing recognition that the development of these technologies can unintentionally create or exacerbate inequalities.
View the policy brief on the Wellcome EPSRC Centre for Interventional Surgical Sciences website
As part of the In Theatre project, a report on how Artificial Intelligence and surgery might lead to healthcare inequalities was commissioned by °×С½ãÂÛ̳’s Policy Impact Unit, which is part of the °×С½ãÂÛ̳ Science Technology Engineering and Public Policy (STEaPP).
The report is based on a series of discussions that took place during two online workshops in July and September of 2022, with participants from the UK Government, academia and the wider community. The main objectives of the first workshop were to map the different ways in which AI and surgery might lead to inequalities and how those inequalities relate to current public understanding and concerns. As a follow-up, the second workshop focussed on exploring what steps might be taken to ensure that the development of new surgical technologies doesn’t inadvertently contribute to health inequalities.Â
Funder
This work was funded by Wellcome grant number 203145/Z/16/A.Â
Lead researchers
Dr Evangelos Mazomenos
Output type
Policy brief
PIU lead
Dr LuÃs Lacerda