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弥合手术同意书的读写能力差距:一种人工智能与人类专家的协作方法。

Bridging the literacy gap for surgical consents: an AI-human expert collaborative approach.

作者信息

Ali Rohaid, Connolly Ian D, Tang Oliver Y, Mirza Fatima N, Johnston Benjamin, Abdulrazeq Hael F, Lim Rachel K, Galamaga Paul F, Libby Tiffany J, Sodha Neel R, Groff Michael W, Gokaslan Ziya L, Telfeian Albert E, Shin John H, Asaad Wael F, Zou James, Doberstein Curtis E

机构信息

Department of Neurosurgery, Rhode Island Hospital and The Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, Providence, RI, USA.

Norman Prince Neurosciences Institute, Providence, RI, USA.

出版信息

NPJ Digit Med. 2024 Mar 8;7(1):63. doi: 10.1038/s41746-024-01039-2.

Abstract

Despite the importance of informed consent in healthcare, the readability and specificity of consent forms often impede patients' comprehension. This study investigates the use of GPT-4 to simplify surgical consent forms and introduces an AI-human expert collaborative approach to validate content appropriateness. Consent forms from multiple institutions were assessed for readability and simplified using GPT-4, with pre- and post-simplification readability metrics compared using nonparametric tests. Independent reviews by medical authors and a malpractice defense attorney were conducted. Finally, GPT-4's potential for generating de novo procedure-specific consent forms was assessed, with forms evaluated using a validated 8-item rubric and expert subspecialty surgeon review. Analysis of 15 academic medical centers' consent forms revealed significant reductions in average reading time, word rarity, and passive sentence frequency (all P < 0.05) following GPT-4-faciliated simplification. Readability improved from an average college freshman to an 8th-grade level (P = 0.004), matching the average American's reading level. Medical and legal sufficiency consistency was confirmed. GPT-4 generated procedure-specific consent forms for five varied surgical procedures at an average 6th-grade reading level. These forms received perfect scores on a standardized consent form rubric and withstood scrutiny upon expert subspeciality surgeon review. This study demonstrates the first AI-human expert collaboration to enhance surgical consent forms, significantly improving readability without sacrificing clinical detail. Our framework could be extended to other patient communication materials, emphasizing clear communication and mitigating disparities related to health literacy barriers.

摘要

尽管知情同意书在医疗保健中至关重要,但同意书的可读性和具体性常常妨碍患者的理解。本研究调查了使用GPT-4简化手术同意书的情况,并引入了一种人工智能与人类专家协作的方法来验证内容的适当性。对来自多个机构的同意书进行可读性评估,并使用GPT-4进行简化,使用非参数检验比较简化前后的可读性指标。由医学作者和医疗事故辩护律师进行独立审查。最后,评估了GPT-4生成全新的特定手术同意书的潜力,使用经过验证的8项评分标准和专家亚专科外科医生审查对同意书进行评估。对15个学术医疗中心的同意书进行分析后发现,在GPT-4辅助简化后,平均阅读时间、词汇稀有度和被动句频率均显著降低(所有P < 0.05)。可读性从平均大学新生水平提高到八年级水平(P = 0.004),与美国人的平均阅读水平相当。确认了医学和法律充分性的一致性。GPT-4为五种不同的外科手术生成了特定手术同意书,平均阅读水平为六年级。这些同意书在标准化同意书评分标准上获得了满分,并在专家亚专科外科医生审查中经受住了检验。本研究展示了首次人工智能与人类专家合作以改进手术同意书,在不牺牲临床细节的情况下显著提高了可读性。我们的框架可扩展到其他患者沟通材料,强调清晰沟通并减轻与健康素养障碍相关的差异。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/2abb/10923794/f537db35b31c/41746_2024_1039_Fig1_HTML.jpg

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