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      Artificial intelligence-based computer aided detection (AI-CAD) in the fight against tuberculosis: Effects of moving health technologies in global health.

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          Abstract

          Computer Aided Detection software based on Artificial Intelligence (AI-CAD), combined with chest X-rays have recently been promoted as an easy fix for a complex problem: ending TB by 2030. WHO has recommended the use of such imaging devices in 2021 and many partnerships have helped propose benchmark analysis and technology comparisons to facilitate their "market access". Our aim is to examine the socio-political and health issues that stem from using AI-CAD technology in a global health context conceptualized as a set of practice and ideas organizing global intervention "in the life of others". We also question how this technology, which is not yet fully implemented in routine use, may limit or amplify some inequalities in the care of tuberculosis. We describe AI-CAD through Actor-Network-Theory framework to understand the global assemblage and composite activities associated with detection through AI-CAD, and interrogate how the technology itself may consolidate a specific configuration of "global health". We explore the various dimensions of AI-CAD "health effects model": technology design, development, regulation, institutional competition, social interaction and health cultures. On a broader level, AI-CAD represents a new version of global health's accelerationist model centered on "moving and autonomous-presumed technologies". We finally present key aspects in our research which help discuss the theories mobilized: AI-CAD ambivalent insertion in global health, the social lives of its data: from efficacy to markets and AI-CAD human care and maintenance it requires. We reflect on the conditions that will affect AI-CAD use and its promises. In the end, the risk of new detection technologies such as AI-CAD is indeed that the fight against TB could be reduced to one that is purely technical and technological, with neglect to its social determinants and effects.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Soc Sci Med
          Social science & medicine (1982)
          Elsevier BV
          1873-5347
          0277-9536
          Jun 2023
          : 327
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Montréal, Montréal, Canada; OBVIA, Observatoire sur les impacts sociétaux de l'intelligence artificielle et du numérique, Québec, Canada.
          [2 ] OBVIA, Observatoire sur les impacts sociétaux de l'intelligence artificielle et du numérique, Québec, Canada; Departments of Medicine & Epidemiology, Biostatistics & Occupational Health, McGill University, Montréal, Canada.
          [3 ] School of Global Health & Dahdaleh Institute of Global Health Research, York University, Canada; Centre for the AIDS Programme of Research in South Africa (CAPRISA), University of KwaZulu Natal, South Africa.
          [4 ] Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Montréal, Montréal, Canada; OBVIA, Observatoire sur les impacts sociétaux de l'intelligence artificielle et du numérique, Québec, Canada. Electronic address: pierre-marie.david@umontreal.ca.
          Article
          S0277-9536(23)00306-4
          10.1016/j.socscimed.2023.115949
          37207379
          4c2d71d0-ffea-42d9-b639-34a90f5ecb3d
          History

          Tuberculosis,Computer aided detection,Artificial intelligence (AI),Equity,Global health,Health technologies

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