Abstract
Artificial and virtual technologies in healthcare have advanced rapidly, and healthcare systems have been adapting care accordingly. An intriguing new development is the virtual physician, which can diagnose and treat patients independently. This qualitative study of advanced degree students aimed to assess their perceptions of using a virtual primary care physician as a patient. Four focus groups were held: first year medical students, fourth year medical students, first year engineering/data science graduate students, and fourth year engineering/data science graduate students. The focus groups were audiotaped, transcribed verbatim, and content analyses of the transcripts was performed using a data-driven inductive approach. Themes identified concerned advantages, disadvantages, and the future of virtual primary care physicians. Within those main categories, 13 themes emerged and 31 sub-themes. While participants appreciated that a virtual primary care physician would be convenient, efficient, and cost-effective, they also expressed concern about data privacy and the potential for misdiagnosis. To garner trust from its potential users, future virtual primary physicians should be programmed with a sufficient amount of trustworthy data and have a high level of transparency and accountability for patients.
Highlights
As artificial intelligence (AI) technology continues to advance, healthcare systems are adapting care delivery to incorporate these technologies and enhance the services they provide [1–3]
This qualitative study of advanced degree students aimed to assess their perceptions of using a virtual primary care physician as a patient
While participants appreciated that a virtual primary care physician would be convenient, efficient, and cost-effective, they expressed concern about data privacy and the potential for misdiagnosis
Summary
As artificial intelligence (AI) technology continues to advance, healthcare systems are adapting care delivery to incorporate these technologies and enhance the services they provide [1–3]. The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic has dramatically accelerated the use of telehealth and AI-informed decision-making in healthcare [4–6]. Artificial and virtual technologies in healthcare have advanced rapidly, and healthcare systems have been adapting care . An intriguing new development is the virtual physician, which can diagnose and treat patients independently
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