Background The integration of artificial intelligence (AI) into clinical practice holds transformative potential for healthcare in West Africa, but safe deployment requires context-appropriate governance, accountability, and post-deployment monitoring frameworks. This cross-sectional mixed-methods study examined preferences and concerns of West African clinicians and technical experts regarding AI governance structures, post-deployment surveillance mechanisms, and accountability allocation.
Methods A structured questionnaire was administered to 136 physicians affiliated with the West African College of Physicians (February 22-28, 2026), complemented by 72 key informant interviews with technical leads, AI developers, data scientists, policymakers, and healthcare leaders. Data were analyzed using descriptive statistics, inferential tests, and thematic analysis.
Results Clinicians strongly preferred independent regulatory bodies (40.4%) for overseeing AI tool performance, with high trust ratings (mean:4.3/5), while vendor self-monitoring received minimal support (3.7%, mean:2.4/5). Real-time dashboards were the most favored monitoring approach (41.9%). Clear accountability pathways (94.1%), algorithm transparency (91.9%), and real-time performance data (89.7%) were rated essential by majorities. Major concerns included clinicians being unfairly blamed for AI errors (76.5%), excessive vendor control (72.8%), and absence of clear reporting pathways (69.9%). Qualitative findings emphasized continuous performance tracking for accuracy, fairness, and bias; structured incident reporting; protocols for model drift and failure; and multi-layered governance combining independent oversight, institutional AI committees, and explicit liability frameworks.
Conclusion This study provides the first empirical evidence from West Africa on clinician preferences for AI governance. Findings offer actionable guidance for policymakers to build trustworthy, equitable, and safe AI integration frameworks that prioritize transparency, independent oversight, and clinician protection.
Competing Interest StatementThe authors have declared no competing interest.
Funding StatementThis research received no specific grant from any funding agency in the public, commercial, or not-for-profit sectors.
Author DeclarationsI confirm all relevant ethical guidelines have been followed, and any necessary IRB and/or ethics committee approvals have been obtained.
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Ethical approval was obtained from the Ethical Clearance Committee of the University of Nigeria Teaching Hospital (ethical clearance number UNTH/HREC/2026/01/4157).
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FootnotesEmail: bscuzochukwugmail.com, ycherimagmail.com, doctorenebeliyahoo.com, cecelia.okekeunn.edu.ng, adaora.uzochukwuunn.edu.ng, doctoramobiomohagmail.com, blessinghassan21gmail.com, eronu.majiyebouniabuja.edu.ng, smyusufabu.edu.ng, uzochukwu.kennedygmail.com, drkaluiche51gmail.com
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