TY - JOUR
T1 - Collaboration, not Confrontation
T2 - Understanding General Practitioners' Attitudes Towards Natural Language and Text Automation in Clinical Practice
AU - Fraile Navarro, David
AU - Kocaballi, A. Baki
AU - Dras, Mark
AU - Berkovsky, Shlomo
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 Association for Computing Machinery.
PY - 2023/4/13
Y1 - 2023/4/13
N2 - General Practitioners are among the primary users and curators of textual electronic health records, highlighting the need for technologies supporting record access and administration. Recent advancements in natural language processing facilitate the development of clinical systems, automating some time-consuming record-keeping tasks. However, it remains unclear what automation tasks would benefit clinicians most, what features such automation should exhibit, and how clinicians will interact with the automation. We conducted semi-structured interviews with General Practitioners uncovering their views and attitudes toward text automation. The main emerging theme was doctor-AI collaboration, addressing a reciprocal clinician-technology relationship that does not threaten to substitute clinicians, but rather establishes a constructive synergistic relationship. Other themes included: (i) desired features for clinical text automation; (ii) concerns around clinical text automation; and (iii) the consultation of the future. Our findings will inform the design of future natural language processing systems, to be implemented in general practice.
AB - General Practitioners are among the primary users and curators of textual electronic health records, highlighting the need for technologies supporting record access and administration. Recent advancements in natural language processing facilitate the development of clinical systems, automating some time-consuming record-keeping tasks. However, it remains unclear what automation tasks would benefit clinicians most, what features such automation should exhibit, and how clinicians will interact with the automation. We conducted semi-structured interviews with General Practitioners uncovering their views and attitudes toward text automation. The main emerging theme was doctor-AI collaboration, addressing a reciprocal clinician-technology relationship that does not threaten to substitute clinicians, but rather establishes a constructive synergistic relationship. Other themes included: (i) desired features for clinical text automation; (ii) concerns around clinical text automation; and (iii) the consultation of the future. Our findings will inform the design of future natural language processing systems, to be implemented in general practice.
KW - electronic health records
KW - general practice
KW - Natural language processing
KW - text automation
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85164280636&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1145/3569893
DO - 10.1145/3569893
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85164280636
SN - 1073-0516
VL - 30
JO - ACM Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction
JF - ACM Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction
IS - 2
M1 - 29
ER -