[{"language":[{"iso":"eng"}],"doi":"10.1177/14604582211052391","date_updated":"2023-01-18T07:58:55Z","publication_status":"published","publication_identifier":{"issn":["1460-4582","1741-2811"]},"title":"Is it alright to use artificial intelligence in digital health? A systematic literature review on ethical considerations","year":"2021","type":"journal_article","citation":{"bibtex":"@article{Möllmann_Mirbabaie_Stieglitz_2021, title={Is it alright to use artificial intelligence in digital health? A systematic literature review on ethical considerations}, volume={27}, DOI={10.1177/14604582211052391}, number={4146045822110523}, journal={Health Informatics Journal}, publisher={SAGE Publications}, author={Möllmann, Nicholas RJ and Mirbabaie, Milad and Stieglitz, Stefan}, year={2021} }","mla":"Möllmann, Nicholas RJ, et al. “Is It Alright to Use Artificial Intelligence in Digital Health? A Systematic Literature Review on Ethical Considerations.” Health Informatics Journal, vol. 27, no. 4, 146045822110523, SAGE Publications, 2021, doi:10.1177/14604582211052391.","apa":"Möllmann, N. R., Mirbabaie, M., & Stieglitz, S. (2021). Is it alright to use artificial intelligence in digital health? A systematic literature review on ethical considerations. Health Informatics Journal, 27(4), Article 146045822110523. https://doi.org/10.1177/14604582211052391","ama":"Möllmann NR, Mirbabaie M, Stieglitz S. Is it alright to use artificial intelligence in digital health? A systematic literature review on ethical considerations. Health Informatics Journal. 2021;27(4). doi:10.1177/14604582211052391","chicago":"Möllmann, Nicholas RJ, Milad Mirbabaie, and Stefan Stieglitz. “Is It Alright to Use Artificial Intelligence in Digital Health? A Systematic Literature Review on Ethical Considerations.” Health Informatics Journal 27, no. 4 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1177/14604582211052391.","ieee":"N. R. Möllmann, M. Mirbabaie, and S. Stieglitz, “Is it alright to use artificial intelligence in digital health? A systematic literature review on ethical considerations,” Health Informatics Journal, vol. 27, no. 4, Art. no. 146045822110523, 2021, doi: 10.1177/14604582211052391.","short":"N.R. Möllmann, M. Mirbabaie, S. Stieglitz, Health Informatics Journal 27 (2021)."},"article_number":"146045822110523","issue":"4","intvolume":" 27","_id":"37154","volume":27,"status":"public","date_created":"2023-01-17T15:34:53Z","publisher":"SAGE Publications","author":[{"full_name":"Möllmann, Nicholas RJ","first_name":"Nicholas RJ","last_name":"Möllmann"},{"id":"88691","last_name":"Mirbabaie","full_name":"Mirbabaie, Milad","first_name":"Milad"},{"last_name":"Stieglitz","full_name":"Stieglitz, Stefan","first_name":"Stefan"}],"publication":"Health Informatics Journal","keyword":["Health Informatics"],"user_id":"80546","abstract":[{"text":" The application of artificial intelligence (AI) not only yields in advantages for healthcare but raises several ethical questions. Extant research on ethical considerations of AI in digital health is quite sparse and a holistic overview is lacking. A systematic literature review searching across 853 peer-reviewed journals and conferences yielded in 50 relevant articles categorized in five major ethical principles: beneficence, non-maleficence, autonomy, justice, and explicability. The ethical landscape of AI in digital health is portrayed including a snapshot guiding future development. The status quo highlights potential areas with little empirical but required research. Less explored areas with remaining ethical questions are validated and guide scholars’ efforts by outlining an overview of addressed ethical principles and intensity of studies including correlations. Practitioners understand novel questions AI raises eventually leading to properly regulated implementations and further comprehend that society is on its way from supporting technologies to autonomous decision-making systems. ","lang":"eng"}]}]