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Using Generative Artificial Intelligence for Healthcare-Associated Infection Surveillance
1
Zitationen
12
Autoren
2025
Jahr
Abstract
Generative artificial intelligence (GenAI) is becoming widespread in society but has had limited impact on medicine. GenAI can rapidly digest large documents, making it particularly well suited for healthcare-associated infection (HAI) surveillance that is largely based on clinical notes. In this article, we review evidence on the application of GenAI for HAI surveillance and highlight the necessary steps for changes to practice. Small studies of simulated patients and retrospective studies of patient records have found GenAI can isolate individual criteria for HAI and make HAI determinations with accuracy similar to that of human experts. GenAI tools are being developed to assist in HAI detection. Use of GenAI for HAI review could reduce variability between facilities, improve efficiency of HAI review. and lead to more time for direct prevention work. For widespread adoption, GenAI HAI detection must be safe and effective in prospective clinical studies.
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Autoren
Institutionen
- University of Maryland, Baltimore(US)
- VA Maryland Health Care System(US)
- Institute of Computing Technology(CN)
- University of California, Los Angeles(US)
- Center for the Study of Healthcare Provider Behavior(US)
- VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System(US)
- Harvard University(US)
- Massachusetts General Hospital(US)
- Palo Alto University(US)
- Stanford University(US)
- University of Utah(US)
- VA Salt Lake City Healthcare System(US)
- United States Department of Veterans Affairs(US)
- VA Office of Research and Development(US)
- VA Long Beach Healthcare System(US)
- Institute of Human Virology(NG)
- Johns Hopkins University(US)
- Johns Hopkins Medicine(US)
- Johns Hopkins Hospital(US)