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Africa’s readiness for artificial intelligence in clinical radiotherapy delivery: Medical physicists to lead the way
19
Zitationen
12
Autoren
2023
Jahr
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There have been several proposals by researchers for the introduction of Artificial Intelligence (AI) technology due to its promising role in radiotherapy practice. However, prior to the introduction of the technology, there are certain general recommendations that must be achieved. Also, the current challenges of AI must be addressed. In this review, we assess how Africa is prepared for the integration of AI technology into radiotherapy service delivery. METHODS: To assess the readiness of Africa for integration of AI in radiotherapy services delivery, a narrative review of the available literature from PubMed, Science Direct, Google Scholar, and Scopus was conducted in the English language using search terms such as Artificial Intelligence, Radiotherapy in Africa, Machine Learning, Deep Learning, and Quality Assurance. RESULTS: We identified a number of issues that could limit the successful integration of AI technology into radiotherapy practice. The major issues include insufficient data for training and validation of AI models, lack of educational curriculum for AI radiotherapy-related courses, no/limited AI teaching professionals, funding, and lack of AI technology and resources. Solutions identified to facilitate smooth implementation of the technology into radiotherapy practices within the region include: creating an accessible national data bank, integrating AI radiotherapy training programs into Africa's educational curriculum, investing in AI technology and resources such as electronic health records and cloud storage, and creation of legal laws and policies to support the use of the technology. These identified solutions need to be implemented on the background of creating awareness among health workers within the radiotherapy space. CONCLUSION: The challenges identified in this review are common among all the geographical regions in the African continent. Therefore, all institutions offering radiotherapy education and training programs, management of the medical centers for radiotherapy and oncology, national and regional professional bodies for medical physics, ministries of health, governments, and relevant stakeholders must take keen interest and work together to achieve this goal.
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Autoren
Institutionen
- University for Development Studies(GH)
- Ghana Atomic Energy Commission(GH)
- Stellenbosch University(ZA)
- University of Abuja(NG)
- University of Calabar(NG)
- Université de Yaoundé I(CM)
- Yaoundé General Hospital(CM)
- Centre de Recherche Nucléaire d’Alger(DZ)
- Durban University of Technology(ZA)
- University of Ghana(GH)
- University of Health and Allied Sciences(GH)
- Medical University Plovdiv(BG)