Prof. Karin Wolf-Ostermann is a co-author of the white paper resulting from the survey. In an interview with MEDICA-tradefair.com, she talks about the requirements and possibilities of AI in healthcare.
Prof. Wolf-Ostermann, what are the results of the survey?
Prof. Karin Wolf-Ostermann: Among health professionals in the medical and nursing field, there is generally a great openness to new technologies. But in my area of focus, nursing, about 90% of the published studies do not concern actual applications in practice. Few of these technologies have yet arrived in everyday care, particularly in long-term care.
In nursing, the target dimensions are often monitoring or classification of activities or health status. Many studies also deal with alarm management, fall detection, pain assessment, documentation, and duty scheduling. However, we often still struggle in care with the lack of digital infrastructure and the availability of high-quality data. The high individualization of AI decisions in particular is dependent on good data.
In the medical field, for example, there is already a very good data situation in hematology or radiology, and AI applications are already being used more frequently in these areas.
How do skilled workers need to be introduced to the topic of AI?
Wolf-Ostermann: The focus is on developing the skills to deal with AI systems. The new technologies must be integrated into existing structures and workflows and developed further in them. I like to use the term 'carpool' for this: not one partner has to pick up the other, but both have to start together, talk to each other, and design solutions. A high level of user-friendliness and acceptance are important for success in practice.