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This is the first book to examine the rising use of Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Big Data in military and humanitarian healthcare, including the use of AI for diagnostic assistants, robotic surgery, and the general practice of medicine itself. Although AI and Big Data may simplify and improve a wide range of healthcare processes and procedures in very difficult situations, their use also raises a number of significant ethical challenges and dilemmas. These challenges are addressed for the first time in the contributions of this book, which derive from a wide-ranging and interdisciplinary…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This is the first book to examine the rising use of Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Big Data in military and humanitarian healthcare, including the use of AI for diagnostic assistants, robotic surgery, and the general practice of medicine itself. Although AI and Big Data may simplify and improve a wide range of healthcare processes and procedures in very difficult situations, their use also raises a number of significant ethical challenges and dilemmas. These challenges are addressed for the first time in the contributions of this book, which derive from a wide-ranging and interdisciplinary forum on the topic held at Jongny, Switzerland in June 2024. The resulting volume offers the first and most authoritative examination of the use of AI for military and humanitarian healthcare. It also addresses resulting questions about leadership, values, and fundamental epistemological questions concerning AI. This volume is of interest to healthcare professionals, officers in the military, humanitarian aid workers, researchers, policymakers, and advanced students in the fields of medical ethics, military ethics, artificial intelligence, and the ethics of technology.
Autorenporträt
Bernhard Koch studied philosophy, logic and scientific theory in Munich and Vienna. In 2006, he received his doctorate in ancient philosophy. From 2007 to 2024, he was project manager, then long-time deputy director, and finally acting director of the Institute for Theology and Peace in Hamburg. He is an adjunct professor of theological ethics at the University of Freiburg and has held various teaching positions in Frankfurt and Hamburg. In 2025, he assumed a position at the Institute for Military Medical Ethics of the German Bundeswehr (InstWehrmedEthikBw) in Munich. In addition to general ethics, his research focusses on the ethics of ius in bello, technology ethics, and the ethics of AI. David Winkler is director of the Center of Reference for Education on International Humanitarian Law and Ethics of the International Committee of Military Medicine. He is a medical doctor specializing in neurology, and holds a Ph.D. in neurobiology. Colonel Winkler is a staff officer in the Swiss Armed Forces Medical Services Directorate. He conducts clinical and academic work at the University Hospital Basel, and the Cantonal Hospital Baselland, Switzerland.