Education
Artificial intelligence in nursing – Nursing Education Network
Artificial intelligence is not any longer a “someday” topic in nursing. It already appears within the tools we use to document care. Helps monitor patients. Supports clinical decisions. Nursing organizations and universities are increasingly describing artificial intelligence as a serious frontier for the occupation. However, this can also be an area where advantages and potential harms should be weighed.
This blog post explores artificial intelligence in nursing AI Nurse Networkwhich looks at where AI is used (and where it’s proposed), what it could actually improve (e.g. performance and earlier detection of degradation), and what it could harm if implemented poorly (e.g. bias, security, privacy and over-reliance on black box results).
Most importantly, it focuses on the nurse’s role: actively engaging in choosing, shaping, and managing AI in order that it enhances – reasonably than replaces – clinical judgment and the human connection at the middle of care.
O’Connor, S., Yan, Y., Thilo, F. J., Felzmann, H., Dowding, D., and Lee, J. J. (2023). Artificial intelligence in nursing and midwifery: a scientific review. Journal of Clinical Nursing, 32(13-14), 2951-2968.
-
Well-Being1 year ago5 books that may help at work at work
-
Global Health1 year agoThe Global Fund opens up the potential of private sector investment – updates
-
Well-Being1 year agoFast and healthy advice on preparing meals for busy nurses
-
Well-Being12 months agoMaintenance of the nursing engine – each day nurse
-
Best Practice10 months agoSafety within the workplace as an ethical imperative in nursing
-
Best Practice1 year agoA cultural approach to the treatment of neonatal pain
-
Well-Being12 months agoHow to get the standard of sleep for higher mental health
-
Education12 months agoAI for teachers – Nursing Education Network
