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The California Attorney General’s Office (AG) unsurprisingly takes an expansive view of how the development, sale, and use of artificial intelligence technology (AI) in healthcare could lead to potential violations of existing California laws. In a recent legal advisory the AG highlights specific areas healthcare organizations should focus on as they develop, train, improve, and deploy AI in connection with patients, plan members, and their data.

In particular, the advisory identifies AI risk hot spots that may trigger certain state consumer protection, anti-discrimination, and privacy/autonomy laws, as described further below.Continue Reading California AG Explains How Laws May Apply to AI in Healthcare

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (“HHS”), through its Office for Civil Rights (“OCR”), recently issued a “Dear Colleague” letter, Ensuring Nondiscrimination Through the Use of Artificial Intelligence (“AI”) and Other Emerging Technologies, which emphasizes the importance of fairness and equity in AI use in patient care decision support tools (e.g., clinical algorithms and predictive analytics) in connection with certain health programs and activities. While not the law, HHS continues to provide its views about using AI in health care.  See our prior post about another HHS publication that organizations can use as guidance. Specifically, the letter emphasizes the importance of complying with the federal nondiscrimination requirements of Section 1557 of the Affordable Care Act (“Section 1557”).

OCR’s letter confirms that it will enforce Section 1557’s nondiscrimination protections to the use of AI (effective from July 5, 2024) and it will require organizations that participate in certain regulated programs and activities to identify and mitigate risks of unlawful discrimination when using AI (effective on May 1, 2025). We highlight OCR’s guidance on these two enforcement objectives related to Section 1557 below.Continue Reading HHS Recent Guidance on AI Use in Health Care

California’s new law, SB 1120, set to take effect on January 1, 2025, regulates how health care service plans (HCSPs) and disability insurers use automated decision-making tools, such as artificial intelligence, to analyze medical necessity in utilization reviews affecting California enrollees. Compared to federal guidelines, this law is more prescriptive, requiring HCSPs and disability

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) has published its Plan for Promoting Responsible Use of Artificial Intelligence in Automated and Algorithmic Systems by State, Local, Tribal, and Territorial Governments in the Administration of Public Benefits (AI Plan for State and Local Governments). It shows the agency’s current thinking on managing risk from

Recent efforts by the federal government to develop a strategy for guiding (and regulating) the use of artificial intelligence (AI) have targeted multiple industry sectors, with healthcare at the forefront. For example, under the President’s recent executive order, in 2024 the Department of Health and Human Services is required to educate itself, publish guidance, and

The health care industry seems to have so much potential for new technologies built on Artificial Intelligence (“AI”) technology, such as chatbots that assist patients and/or physicians in patient care and the adoption of tools that expedite the health claims approval process. We have also seen reports documenting some of the problems that can arise