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Perspective on patient and non-academic partner engagement for the responsible integration of large language models in health chatbots

Title: Perspective on patient and non-academic partner engagement for the responsible integration of large language models in health chatbots
Authors: Jaiswal, Nikhil; Ma, Yuanchao; Lebouché, Bertrand; Poenaru, Dan; Pomey, Marie-Pascale; Achiche, Sofiane; Lessard, David; Engler, Kim; Montiel, Zully; Acevedo, Hector; Gameiro, Rodrigo R.; Celi, Leo A.; Osmanlliu, Esli
Contributors: MIT Critical Data (Laboratory)
Source: BioMed Central
Publisher Information: BioMed Central
Publication Year: 2025
Collection: DSpace@MIT (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
Description: Uses of large language models (LLMs) in health chatbots are expanding into high-stakes clinical contexts, heightening the need for tools that are evidence-based, accountable, accurate, and patient-centred. This conceptual, practice-informed Perspective reflects on engaging patients and non-academic partners for the responsible integration of LLMs, grounded in the co-construction of MARVIN (for people living with HIV) and in an emerging collaboration with MIT Critical Data. Organised by the Software Development Life Cycle, we describe: conception/needs assessment with patient partners to identify use cases, acceptable trade-offs, and privacy expectations; development that prioritises grounding via vetted sources, structured human feedback, and data-validation committees including patient partners; testing and evaluation using patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) and patient-reported experience measures (PREMs) chosen in collaboration with patients to capture usability, acceptability, trust, and perceived safety, alongside task performance and harmful-output monitoring; and implementation via diverse governance boards, knowledge-mobilisation materials to set expectations, and risk-management pathways for potentially unsafe outputs. Based on our experience with MARVIN, we recommend early and continuous engagement of patients and non-academic partners, fair compensation, shared decision-making power, transparent decision logging, and inclusive, adaptable governance that can evolve with changing models and standards. These lessons highlight how patient partnership can directly shape chatbot design and oversight, helping teams align LLM-enabled tools with patient-centred goals while building accountable, safe, and equitable systems.
Document Type: article in journal/newspaper
File Description: application/pdf
Language: English
Relation: https://doi.org/10.1186/s40900-025-00804-1; Research Involvement and Engagement; https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/164518; PUBLISHER_CC
Availability: https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/164518
Rights: Creative Commons Attribution ; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ ; The Author(s)
Accession Number: edsbas.63C384E0
Database: BASE