Title
Argumentative reasoning and taxonomic analysis for the identification of medical errors
Abstract
Telemedicine consists of the use of information and communication technologies (ICTs) in the practice of medicine. The massive digitalisation of the society is changing the behaviour of ordinary people even in medical sectors. The impact of digitisation is also having impacts on teleexpertise, where a medical professional can remotely ask some advices through the use of ICTs to provide treatment to a patient in critical conditions in remote environment. However, sometimes the outcome of such advice obtained remotely can lead to medical errors. In these situations, it is important to determine whether the causes of the errors could have been avoidable or not for the purposes of establishing the truth and assuring justice for the victims of medical errors. The proposed work fits this perspective with the objective to formalise elements of argumentation in collaborative medical organisations using telemedicine. In other words, a technique that extends the Dung's argumentation framework in order to bring out the errors committed following a remote medical procedure has been proposed. The proposed technique is underpinned by graphical reasoning. The reasoning is represented through a directed graph in which the extended nodes specify the arguments with their source(s) and the identification of errors is done according to the Makeham's and Tempos taxonomies. To illustrate the functioning of the proposed technique or solution, an example of the practice of teleexpertise (between two French hospitals) that leads to litigation is presented. HighlightsKnowledge representation and reasoning with a logic-based argumentation framework.Semantics of acceptance to enlighten the collaborative decision making processes.Support the identification of errors according to Makeham's and Tempos taxonomies.Configurable procedures for indexing medical documents and information retrieval.Case study: telemedicine with a teleexpertise for treatment of a subdural haematoma.
Year
DOI
Venue
2015
10.1016/j.engappai.2015.08.009
Engineering Applications of Artificial Intelligence
Keywords
Field
DocType
Argumentation,Knowledge tracing,Taxonomy,Teleexpertise,Medical errors,Legal procedure
Telemedicine,Argumentation framework,Argumentative,Computer science,Argumentation theory,Knowledge management,Search engine indexing,Medical procedure,Artificial intelligence,Information and Communications Technology,Machine learning,Group decision-making
Journal
Volume
Issue
ISSN
46
PA
0952-1976
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
8
0.51
19
Authors
4
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Mamadou Bilo Doumbouya1362.82
Bernard Kamsu-Foguem231820.94
Hugues Kenfack3362.82
Clovis Foguem4654.47