CT senator wants to restrict insurance companies from using AI to decide health care
Mar. 4—In an ever-changing, tech-driven world, artificial intelligence systems are becoming increasingly pervasive each year. At the same time, lawmakers across the country and in
One such bill, proposed by state Sen.
He said the bill comes after a ProPublica investigation found how
Anwar, who is a medical doctor specializing in diseases of the lungs, said these quick denials of care increase "stock value at the cost of human beings," as patients "will die ... some of them will live in agony and pain" while waiting to access the care they need.
Patients "deserve a human being on the other side to be able to look at things, rather than an artificial intelligence algorithm, which is basically trained to deny care, so that some of the times insurance companies can make more profits," Anwar said. "That is unethical, immoral and wrong for the patients."
It's not new for health payers to use algorithms in their administrative process; AI is the next natural step for that technology, said
He said every patient and the care they need is different, so it makes staff wonder who makes the prior authorization denial decisions in "two seconds," given the complexity of each person's care.
A recent
When providers go through the "exhausting" and "unnecessarily complex" process of appealing, Kidwell said most denials are ultimately overturned, costing time and money for the hospital and creating barriers to care for patients.
"Given the time-sensitivity of all health care interactions, and the gravity of decisions made by the minute, health carriers vary in their deployment of [artificial intelligence systems], but all rely on the work of a Human-in-the-Loop, for critical decision making," Halpin said in an email statement to CT Insider.
She added that the
At the same time, Haplin said AI is "positively transforming" the health care delivery system. She said AI systems that are "responsibly developed and deployed ... will yield accessible, effective, affordable and enhanced health care solutions for all consumers."
She said some of the consumer benefits include improved engagement, clarity, and access to benefits and financial services. It also helped improve access to services through advances in telemedicine and timely data with wearable monitoring devices.
Artificial intelligence systems "and machine learning administrative uses, such as payment integrity and claims adjudication, can help address some of the challenges between payers and providers by improving accuracy and efficiency," Halpin said in an email statement.
Anwar's bill was referred to the
Kidwell said that information about how the AI system is taught and used, and the type of oversight in place are some of the fundamental answers hospitals and their staff need in order to understand the process better.
"Our general view of AI is it can be a really important powerful tool ... so how do we do both of those things, make sure that we're really getting the benefit while making sure that it's fundamentally there to support patient, it's not creating barriers to access," he said.
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