Advancing artificial intelligence ethics in health and genomics: lessons from a public survey in South Korea

Advances in healthcare and genetics are becoming increasingly integrated with artificial intelligence (AI), offering transformative potential alongside complex ethical challenges. This study aimed to assess public awareness and perceptions of AI ethics in healthcare (AI-H) in South Korea, with the u...

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Main Authors: Jungim Lee, Wonhoo Yoo, Hannah Kim
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2025-07-01
Series:Frontiers in Genetics
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Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fgene.2025.1563544/full
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author Jungim Lee
Jungim Lee
Wonhoo Yoo
Hannah Kim
Hannah Kim
author_facet Jungim Lee
Jungim Lee
Wonhoo Yoo
Hannah Kim
Hannah Kim
author_sort Jungim Lee
collection DOAJ
description Advances in healthcare and genetics are becoming increasingly integrated with artificial intelligence (AI), offering transformative potential alongside complex ethical challenges. This study aimed to assess public awareness and perceptions of AI ethics in healthcare (AI-H) in South Korea, with the ultimate goal of informing the development of research ethics guidelines. A nationwide online survey was conducted from January 10 to 20, 2023, targeting the general public, and 1,002 respondents were recruited through stratified random sampling. The questionnaire explored expectations of AI-H, perceived risks, willingness to share different types of personal data, and the perceived importance of various ethical principles and education targets. A large majority of respondents (84.5%) expressed optimism about the positive impacts of AI-H over the next five years, while only 3.1% anticipated negative consequences. Key concerns included the disclosure of personal information (54.0%), potential AI errors causing harm (52.0%), and ambiguous legal responsibilities (42.2%). Willingness to share data was highest for electronic medical records (72.8%), lifestyle data (72.3%), and biometric data (71.3%), while genetic data was least preferred (64.1%). Ethical principles considered most important were privacy protection (83.9%), safety and security (83.7%), legal duties (83.4%), and responsiveness (83.3%). Developers (70.7%), medical institution managers (68.2%), and researchers (65.6%) were identified as top priorities for ethics education, whereas the general public (31.0%) and students (18.7%) ranked lower. This study represents the first nationwide assessment of public ethical awareness of AI-H in South Korea. While there is strong support for AI-H, significant concerns remain, particularly regarding data privacy and legal accountability. The findings highlight the need for expanded ethics education, especially among younger populations, and for balanced attention to ethical principles beyond privacy, such as inclusiveness and accessibility. These insights provide valuable guidance for developing socially responsible AI policies and practices in healthcare.
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spelling doaj-art-26a0cc04633744d0903b84b300916a152025-08-20T03:28:47ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Genetics1664-80212025-07-011610.3389/fgene.2025.15635441563544Advancing artificial intelligence ethics in health and genomics: lessons from a public survey in South KoreaJungim Lee0Jungim Lee1Wonhoo Yoo2Hannah Kim3Hannah Kim4Graduate School of Public Health, Yonsei University, Seoul, Republic of KoreaAsian Institute for Bioethics and Health Law, Yonsei University, Seoul, Republic of KoreaAsian Institute for Bioethics and Health Law, Yonsei University, Seoul, Republic of KoreaAsian Institute for Bioethics and Health Law, Yonsei University, Seoul, Republic of KoreaDivision of Medical and Health Law, College of Medicine, Yonsei University, Seoul, Republic of KoreaAdvances in healthcare and genetics are becoming increasingly integrated with artificial intelligence (AI), offering transformative potential alongside complex ethical challenges. This study aimed to assess public awareness and perceptions of AI ethics in healthcare (AI-H) in South Korea, with the ultimate goal of informing the development of research ethics guidelines. A nationwide online survey was conducted from January 10 to 20, 2023, targeting the general public, and 1,002 respondents were recruited through stratified random sampling. The questionnaire explored expectations of AI-H, perceived risks, willingness to share different types of personal data, and the perceived importance of various ethical principles and education targets. A large majority of respondents (84.5%) expressed optimism about the positive impacts of AI-H over the next five years, while only 3.1% anticipated negative consequences. Key concerns included the disclosure of personal information (54.0%), potential AI errors causing harm (52.0%), and ambiguous legal responsibilities (42.2%). Willingness to share data was highest for electronic medical records (72.8%), lifestyle data (72.3%), and biometric data (71.3%), while genetic data was least preferred (64.1%). Ethical principles considered most important were privacy protection (83.9%), safety and security (83.7%), legal duties (83.4%), and responsiveness (83.3%). Developers (70.7%), medical institution managers (68.2%), and researchers (65.6%) were identified as top priorities for ethics education, whereas the general public (31.0%) and students (18.7%) ranked lower. This study represents the first nationwide assessment of public ethical awareness of AI-H in South Korea. While there is strong support for AI-H, significant concerns remain, particularly regarding data privacy and legal accountability. The findings highlight the need for expanded ethics education, especially among younger populations, and for balanced attention to ethical principles beyond privacy, such as inclusiveness and accessibility. These insights provide valuable guidance for developing socially responsible AI policies and practices in healthcare.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fgene.2025.1563544/fullpublic perceptionartificial intelligence in healthcareethical principlesresearch ethics guidelineshealthcare artificial intelligence ethical principles education
spellingShingle Jungim Lee
Jungim Lee
Wonhoo Yoo
Hannah Kim
Hannah Kim
Advancing artificial intelligence ethics in health and genomics: lessons from a public survey in South Korea
Frontiers in Genetics
public perception
artificial intelligence in healthcare
ethical principles
research ethics guidelines
healthcare artificial intelligence ethical principles education
title Advancing artificial intelligence ethics in health and genomics: lessons from a public survey in South Korea
title_full Advancing artificial intelligence ethics in health and genomics: lessons from a public survey in South Korea
title_fullStr Advancing artificial intelligence ethics in health and genomics: lessons from a public survey in South Korea
title_full_unstemmed Advancing artificial intelligence ethics in health and genomics: lessons from a public survey in South Korea
title_short Advancing artificial intelligence ethics in health and genomics: lessons from a public survey in South Korea
title_sort advancing artificial intelligence ethics in health and genomics lessons from a public survey in south korea
topic public perception
artificial intelligence in healthcare
ethical principles
research ethics guidelines
healthcare artificial intelligence ethical principles education
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fgene.2025.1563544/full
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