Carey Beth GoldbergLaura AdamsDavid BlumenthalPatricia Flatley BrennanNoah BrownAtul J. ButteMorgan CheathamDave deBronkartJennifer DixonJeffrey DrazenBarbara J. EvansSara M. HoffmanChris HolmesPeter LeeArjun Kumar ManraiGilbert S. OmennJonathan B. PerlinRachel RamoniGuillermo SapiroRupa SarkarHarpreet SoodEffy VayenaIsaac S. KohaneEmily AlsentzerBrian AndersonRan D. BalicerAndrew L. BeamErwin BottingerRebecca W. BrendelPayal ChandakArnaub ChatterjeeMichael ChernewAntoine DuclosLee A. FleisherWilliam GordonElizabeth HealeyAlejandro Hernández-ArangoMichele Kathleen HerndonAlexander HoffmannEdward M. HundertIndra JoshiTobias KowatschStephen KrausLisa Soleymani LehmannKarim LekadirVincent X. LiuDaniel J. NigrinReut OhanaNigam H. ShahHaris ShuaibTania SimoncelliAmelia Li Min TanDonrich ThaldarEugene TunikTommy WangJohn WilbanksYuchen XuJianfei Zhao2024-03-132024-03-132024https://www.alexandria.unisg.ch/handle/20.500.14171/11967310.1038/s41591-024-02853-7Drawing from real-life scenarios and insights shared at the RAISE (Responsible AI for Social and Ethical Healthcare) conference, we highlight the critical need for AI in health care (AIH) to primarily benefit patients and address current shortcomings in health care systems such as medical errors and access disparities.enTo do no harm — and the most good — with AI in health carejournal article