Algorithmic Individual Fairness for Healthcare: A Scoping Review

Abstract

Statistical and artificial intelligence algorithms are increasingly being developed for use in healthcare. These algorithms may reflect biases that magnify disparities in clinical care, and there is a growing need for understanding how algorithmic biases can be mitigated in pursuit of algorithmic fairness. Individual fairness in algorithms constrains algorithms to the notion that "similar individuals should be treated similarly." We conducted a scoping review on algorithmic individual fairness to understand the current state of research in the metrics and methods developed to achieve individual fairness and its applications in healthcare. We searched three databases, PubMed, ACM Digital Library, and IEEE Xplore, for algorithmic individual fairness metrics, algorithmic bias mitigation, and healthcare applications. Our search was restricted to articles published between January 2013 and September 2023. We identified 1,886 articles through database searches and manually identified one article from which we included 30 articles in the review. Data from the selected articles were extracted, and the findings were synthesized. Based on the 30 articles in the review, we identified several themes, including philosophical underpinnings of fairness, individual fairness metrics, mitigation methods for achieving individual fairness, implications of achieving individual fairness on group fairness and vice versa, fairness metrics that combined individual fairness and group fairness, software for measuring and optimizing individual fairness, and applications of individual fairness in healthcare. While there has been significant work on algorithmic individual fairness in recent years, the definition, use, and study of individual fairness remain in their infancy, especially in healthcare. Future research is needed to apply and evaluate individual fairness in healthcare comprehensively.

Competing Interest Statement

The authors have declared no competing interest.

Funding Statement

Research reported in this publication was supported by the National Institutes of Health under award number T15 LM007059 from the National Library of Medicine and under award number UL1 TR001857 from the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences. It was also supported by a School of Computing and Information Predoctoral Fellowship to JWA.

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Data Availability

All data produced in the present work are contained in the manuscript.

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