Artificial intelligence for sustainable oral healthcare

J Dent. 2022 Dec:127:104344. doi: 10.1016/j.jdent.2022.104344. Epub 2022 Oct 21.

Abstract

Objectives: Oral health is grounded in the United National (UN) 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Developement and its 17 Goals (SDGs), in particular SDG 3 (Ensure healthy lives and promote well-being for all at all ages). The World Health Organization (WHO) Global Strategy on Oral Health calls for prioritizing environmentally sustainable and less invasive oral health care, and planetary health. Artificial Intelligence (AI) has the potential to power the next generation of oral health services and care, however its relationship with the broader UN and WHO concepts of sustainability remains poorly defined and articulated. We review the double-edged relationships between AI and oral health, to suggest actions that promote a sustainable deployment of AI for oral health.

Data: Concepts regarding AI, sustainability and sustainable development were identified and defined. A review of several double-edged relationship between AI and SDGs were exposed for the field of Oral Health.

Sources: Medline and international declarations of the WHO, the UN and the World Dental Federation (FDI) were screened.

Study selection: One the one hand, AI may reduce transportation, optimize care delivery (SDG 3 "Good Health and Well-Being", SDG 13 "Climate Action"), and increase accessibility of services and reduce inequality (SDG 10 "Reduced Inequalities", SDG 4 "Quality Education"). On the other hand, the deployment, implementation and maintenance of AI require significant resources (SDG 12 "Responsible Consumption and Production"), and costs for AI may aggravate inequalities. Also, AI may be biased, reinforcing inequalities (SDG 10) and discrimination (SDG 5), and may violate principles of security, privacy and confidentiality of personal information (SDG 16).

Conclusions: Systematic assessment of the positive impact and adverse effects of AI on sustainable oral health may help to foster the former and curb the latter based on evidence.

Clinical significance: If sustainability imperatives are actively taken into consideration, the community of oral health professionals should then employ AI for improving effectiveness, efficiency, and safety of oral healthcare; strengthen oral health surveillance; foster education and accessibility of care; ensure fairness, transparency and governance of AI for oral health; develop legislation and infrastructure to expand the use of digital health technologies including AI.

Keywords: Artificial intelligence; Ethics; Oral healthcare; Sustainability; Sustainable development goals.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Artificial Intelligence*
  • Delivery of Health Care
  • Global Health*
  • Oral Health*
  • Sustainable Development
  • World Health Organization