Artificial intelligence (AI) is widely expected to transform healthcare, yet its adoption in clinical practice remains limited. This paper examines the perspectives of Italian clinicians and medical physicists on the drivers of and barriers to AI use. Using an online survey of healthcare professionals across different domains, we find that efficiency gains—such as reducing repetitive tasks and accelerating diagnostics—are the strongest incentives for adoption. However, trust in AI systems, explainability, and the limited availability of AI tools are major obstacles. Respondents emphasized that AI should augment, not replace, medical expertise, calling for participatory development processes where clinicians are actively involved in the design and validation of decision support tools. At the organizational level, the adoption of AI tools is facilitated by innovation-oriented leadership and sufficient resources, while conservative management and economic constraints hinder implementation. The awareness of regulatory frameworks, including the EU AI Act, is moderate, and many clinicians express the need for targeted training to support safe integration. Our findings suggest that the successful adoption of AI in healthcare will depend on building trust through transparency, clarifying legal responsibilities, and fostering organizational cultures that support collaboration between humans and AI. The role of AI in medicine is therefore best understood as a complement to clinical judgment, rather than a replacement.
Sensi, F., Lizzi, F., Chincarini, A., Sartori, L., Binelli, C., Retico, A. (2025). Augmenting, Not Replacing: Clinicians’ Perspectives on AI Adoption in Healthcare. APPLIED SCIENCES, 15(23), 1-18 [10.3390/app152312405].
Augmenting, Not Replacing: Clinicians’ Perspectives on AI Adoption in Healthcare
Laura Sartori;Chiara Binelli;Alessandra Retico
2025
Abstract
Artificial intelligence (AI) is widely expected to transform healthcare, yet its adoption in clinical practice remains limited. This paper examines the perspectives of Italian clinicians and medical physicists on the drivers of and barriers to AI use. Using an online survey of healthcare professionals across different domains, we find that efficiency gains—such as reducing repetitive tasks and accelerating diagnostics—are the strongest incentives for adoption. However, trust in AI systems, explainability, and the limited availability of AI tools are major obstacles. Respondents emphasized that AI should augment, not replace, medical expertise, calling for participatory development processes where clinicians are actively involved in the design and validation of decision support tools. At the organizational level, the adoption of AI tools is facilitated by innovation-oriented leadership and sufficient resources, while conservative management and economic constraints hinder implementation. The awareness of regulatory frameworks, including the EU AI Act, is moderate, and many clinicians express the need for targeted training to support safe integration. Our findings suggest that the successful adoption of AI in healthcare will depend on building trust through transparency, clarifying legal responsibilities, and fostering organizational cultures that support collaboration between humans and AI. The role of AI in medicine is therefore best understood as a complement to clinical judgment, rather than a replacement.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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