Lethbridge Herald

Feds looking at AI to improve benefits system

ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGEN­CE PONDERED TO REDUCE SNAGS

- Jordan Press THE CANADIAN PRESS — OTTAWA

Federal officials overseeing billions in benefit payments to millions of Canadians are hoping artificial intelligen­ce can resolve ongoing snags in the system.

The government is looking to “push the boundaries” of what artificial intelligen­ce can do to improve a variety of services, including the pace of benefit decisions to Canadians applying for disability pensions, say documents obtained by The Canadian Press under the access to informatio­n law.

Employment and Social Developmen­t Canada is currently facing processes that are “slow, inefficien­t, inconsiste­nt, and prone to error,” reads a presentati­on about the AI efforts.

Instead of being able to proactivel­y change the way federal services are delivered to Canadians, the documents say, officials are bogged down with millions of “low value” issues that need to be taken care of, crowding out more critical work.

Among the “low value” work are about 50,000 tasks required to issue tax forms to Canada Pension Plan and old age security recipients.

Machine learning could also eliminate the need to have staff review hundreds of public consultati­on submission­s to find key issues and themes.

One of the first small-scale projects to test this new approach for the department — and to demonstrat­e its future potential for other services — is a predictive analytics program launched this spring to triage CPP disability applicatio­ns and speed up benefit decisions.

The Liberals are overseeing changes to the CPP disability program stemming from a critical auditor general review that questioned the length and quality of decision-making.

Michael Ferguson’s 2016 report on the $4-billion disability benefits system found that some one-third of applicants who were originally denied benefits were later found to be eligible, based on the initial evidence. Often there are unnecessar­y delays, denials and appeals concerning applicatio­ns missing supporting medical documents.

It can often take months for a medical adjudicato­r to make a decision about a request for CPP disability benefits — a timeline the documents say can be reduced through an automated review of applicatio­ns.

A spokesman for Employment and Social Developmen­t Canada says final results of the test officials launched in March won’t be known until late next year, including how to roll the approach out nationally. National standards for medical reviews are already in place.

A new, simplified paperbased applicatio­n for CPP disability benefits has been delayed until the end of summer, and an online

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