Skip to main content

EIT Health and McKinsey & Co. release report on AI in healthcare

Report investigates how to unlock the potential of AI in healthcare

A new report from EIT Health and McKinsey & Company exposes an urgent need to attract, educate and train a generation of data-literate healthcare professionals, and to up-skill the current workforce in order to fully realise the transformative potential of Artificial Intelligence (AI).

'Transforming healthcare with AI: The impact on the workforce and organisations', a Europe-wide report published on 03 March 2020 explores the impact of AI on healthcare practitioners, as well as the implications and obstacles for scaling AI in healthcare organisations and systems. The report includes a survey of 175 people on the frontline of healthcare delivery, and interviews with 62 decision-makers, and is complemented by macroeconomic analyses from the work of the McKinsey Global Institute (MGI).

Subscribe now to the EIT’s monthly newsletter

Along with exploring the effect AI will have on the future of European healthcare and its workforce, the report highlights the need to define new organisational models and skillsets that healthcare professionals will need to support the adoption and scaling of AI. It also outlines the new types of talent that the healthcare sector will need to attract.

The report finds that basic digital skills, biomedical and data science, data analysis, and the fundamentals of genomics will be critical, if AI and machine learning is to penetrate healthcare services.

These subjects are rarely taught alongside traditional clinical sciences systematically. And so, through no fault of their own, today’s healthcare workforce is simply not yet equipped for the adoption of AI.

Jorge Fernández García, Director of Innovation at EIT Health

Download the EIT's AI report

A need for change

The incentives for healthcare systems to embrace these changes are clear. The World Health Organisation (WHO) estimates that by 2030 the world will be short of 9.9 million doctors, nurses and midwives, which adds further urgency to address the challenge of already overburdened health systems. Supporting the widespread adoption and scaling of AI could help alleviate resource capacity shortfalls both now and in the future, for example, by streamlining or even eliminating administrative tasks, which can occupy anything between 20 and 80 percent of a healthcare professional’s time, according to the WHO.

Being at the forefront of healthcare innovation in Europe, we are seeing an increasing number of tangible, impactful and exciting AI solutions created. However, we must couple the generation of new technology that can relieve some of the pressure on healthcare services, with the ability for it to be integrated into care delivery. Now is the time for us to address the gaps, so that Europe does not fall behind in the application of AI.

Jorge Fernández García, Director of Innovation at EIT Health

Besides upskilling, better involvement of healthcare professionals in the early stages of AI development was also identified in the report as a key need. Of the healthcare stakeholders interviewed for the report, 44% said they had never been involved in the development or deployment of an AI solution.

AI has enormous potential to improve productivity and efficiency in health systems and make them more sustainable – but more importantly, it has the potential to deliver better health outcomes for patients. It can do so in many ways, from enabling more preventive care, to allowing healthcare practitioners to spend more time on direct patient care. This joint report provides guidance for decision-makers to define their level of aspiration on AI and develop and implement the right approach for their organisation or health system.

Dr. Angela Spatharou, Partner at McKinsey & Company

Decision-makers interviewed for the report emphasised the need to develop scaling up training and suggested that national health systems should work together with healthcare professionals, academia and industry in order to support healthcare providers, in particular those who are not large enough to deliver such programmes alone. They also emphasised the importance of ensuring AI is ethical, transparent and trustworthy.

This new report provides a unique view on the state-of-play and prospects of AI for healthcare in Europe, covering areas including: strengthening data quality, governance, security and interoperability, implementing a robust change management strategy, addressing issues around regulation, policy-making and liability, redefining funding and reimbursement models and criteria for investment, and designing how disciplines can work better together to improve quality.

Read the report