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2014 National Health Leadership Conference
2014-06-02    
All Day
WELCOME! This conference is the largest national gathering of health system decision-makers in Canada including trustees, chief executive officers, directors, managers, department heads and other [...]
EMR : Every Step Conference and Vendor Showcase
2014-06-12    
8:00 am - 6:00 pm
OntarioMD is pleased to invite you to join us for the EMR: Every Step Conference and Vendor Showcase, an interactive day to learn and participate in [...]
GOVERNMENT HEALTH IT Conference & Exhibition
Why Attend? As budgets tighten, workforces shrink, ICD-10 looms, more consumers enter the healthcare system and you still struggle with meaningful use — challenges remain [...]
MD Logic EHR User Conference 2014
2014-06-20    
All Day
Who Should Attend: Doctors, PA’s, NP’s, PT’s, Administrators,Managers, Clinical Staff, IT Staff What is the Focus of the Conference: Meaningful Use Stage II, ICD-10 and [...]
Events on 2014-06-02
Events on 2014-06-12
Events on 2014-06-17
Events on 2014-06-20
Latest News

Artificial Intelligence Health Standards and Regulation – CHAI CTA

EMR industry

Race to Define Health AI Standards as Six Groups Step Forward
Government agencies provide minimal guidance on adoption

In recent years, the use of artificial intelligence in health care has grown well beyond reading radiology scans or identifying high-risk sepsis patients. AI is now being used to write medical visit notes, answer patient questions, handle phone calls, and even manage claims. Yet, figuring out which AI tools to adopt, how to implement them effectively, and how to ensure they function safely remains a major challenge for health systems and AI developers. With minimal guidance from government agencies—the FDA oversees only a small portion of these applications—health care organizations often face uncertainty about where to turn.

To fill this gap, several organizations have stepped in to provide guidance, hoping their frameworks will influence the broader industry. These groups range from newly formed collectives to established trade organizations that have been active in health care for decades.

If these organizations achieve widespread adoption, they could shape the standards health systems use to assess and oversee AI technologies, standardize the practices developers follow before releasing health AI products, guide the formation of future regulations, and help prevent adverse effects that might harm patients or hinder industry progress.