Fig. 2
From: Patients’ views of wearable devices and AI in healthcare: findings from the ComPaRe e-cohort

Aggregated answers to the 4 vignettes evaluating patients’ readiness to integrate specific biometric monitoring devices (BMDs) and AI-based interventions in their care (n = 1176). The 4 situations evaluated were the use of (1) patients’ skin photographs and AI to screen for skin cancer rather than consultations with a dermatologist;10,22 (2) wearable sensors for continuous and real-time monitoring and the analysis of collected data by AI to predict flares of their chronic conditions rather than usual follow-up (doctor visits, tests, etc.);14 (3) a smart shirt and AI to guide physical therapy rather than visits to a physiotherapist;23 and (4) an AI chatbot to help patients determine how urgent their problems are rather than calling an emergency telephone number.24 Estimates were obtained from the weighted dataset after calibration on margins for sex-specific age categories and educational level with data from a national census describing the French population self-reporting at least one chronic condition