AI in Healthcare
The latest on artificial intelligence transforming medicine
News stories discovered and organized by an automated pipeline. Covering clinical deployments, research breakthroughs, regulation, and industry developments.
CMS’s WISeR Review Program Could Reshape How Healthcare Ops Are Audited
CMS’s WISeR AI review initiative is drawing attention for its potential to alter how utilization and operational decisions are scrutinized. Health systems and vendors may face new friction as AI-assisted review becomes a more consequential part of the reimbursement environment.
Can AI in Health Be Shaped by Policy Before the Market Runs Ahead?
CEPS takes a policy-level view of AI in health, asking how regulation and governance can shape the technology’s future rather than merely react to it. The piece is notable for framing AI as a system-level policy challenge, not just a clinical innovation.
In Radiology, the Real Debate Is No Longer Whether AI Will Arrive — It’s Who Controls It
WBUR’s latest coverage frames AI in medicine as a question of authority, trust, and accountability rather than raw technical capability. In radiology especially, the central issue is shifting from prediction to governance.
New FDA adverse event lookup tool strengthens the infrastructure around medical AI oversight
The FDA’s new adverse event look-up tool is an infrastructure story with outsized implications for AI-enabled medical products. Better visibility into safety signals could improve scrutiny of software-driven devices at a time when adaptive algorithms and faster product cycles are straining traditional oversight methods.
Can AI Lower Radiology Malpractice Risk? The Real Story Is Standardization, Not Immunity
A new discussion in radiology examines whether AI could reduce malpractice exposure, but the bigger issue is how software changes expectations around missed findings, documentation, and standard of care. AI may help reduce some errors while simultaneously creating new legal duties around oversight and follow-up.
Federal Gaps in Healthcare AI Oversight Are Becoming Harder to Ignore
Penn Medicine faculty are calling attention to holes in federal healthcare AI regulation, adding to the chorus of experts arguing that current oversight remains fragmented. The debate is shifting from whether regulation is needed to where exactly the safety, liability, and transparency gaps still are.
How this works
Discover
An automated pipeline searches the web for significant AI healthcare news across clinical, research, regulatory, and industry domains.
Structure
The pipeline turns source material into concise, readable stories with categories, tags, and context that make the feed easier to scan.
Publish
Stories are deduplicated, stored, and published to this site. The pipeline runs automatically to keep coverage current.