Explainable AI for Healthcare: Training Healthcare Workers to Use Artificial Intelligence Techniques to Reduce Medical Negligence in Ghana’s Public Health Act, 2012 (Act 851)

Main Article Content

George Benneh Mensah
Maad M. Mijwil
Mostafa Abotaleb
Guma Ali
Pushan Kumar Dutta
Toufik Mzili
Marwa M. Eid

Abstract

This analysis examines whether Ghana’s Public Health Act, 2012 (Act 851) imposes adequate legal responsibilities on healthcare facilities concerning personnel training on artificial intelligence (AI) systems and implementation of medical negligence reduction measures. Through an evaluative review of Act 851 provisions on staff qualifications, technology deployment, quality care, safety planning, and risk management benchmarks relative to precedents in Ghana and other countries, critical gaps in binding regulations to incentivize organizational capacity building for mitigating errors, hazards and liabilities from substandard practices were identified. Key recommendations include amending Act 851 to mandate credentialing assurance frameworks, clinical audits, risk assessment models and transparency requirements around reporting quality indicators. Strengthening policy directives will compel internal monitoring, governance, and accountability among healthcare facilities as multilayered negligence prevention strategies. Scientific contributions highlight deficiencies in Ghana’s health legislation regarding contemporary challenges like AI adoption risks and propose legal reforms to modernize regulations to support safer, responsible healthcare delivery nationwide.   

Article Details

How to Cite
Mensah, G. B., Mijwil, M. M. ., Abotaleb, M. ., Ali , G. ., Dutta, P. K. ., Mzili, T., & Eid , M. M. (2025). Explainable AI for Healthcare: Training Healthcare Workers to Use Artificial Intelligence Techniques to Reduce Medical Negligence in Ghana’s Public Health Act, 2012 (Act 851). EDRAAK, 2025, 1-6. https://doi.org/10.70470/EDRAAK/2025/001
Section
Articles