The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has authorized for market some 1,000 medical devices powered by augmented intelligence (AI), even as a “whole government” policy on its use has yet to be offered by lawmakers or regulators in Washington.
States step up, The aim is to enact rules that address concerns about accuracy, bias and privacy—but not at the expense of stifling the promised benefits that AI innovation is expected to produce. Because there has been little AI legislation coming out of Congress, state legislatures are stepping up, by 250 health AI-related bills being introduced this year across 34 states.
The state bills cover these four basic topics:
1.Transparency. Typically.
2.Consumer protection.
3.Payer use of AI.
4.Clinical use.
States pass a lot of bills in a lot of different areas, They move much faster, and they're often viewed as laboratories for these potential policy solutions, and a lot of things that trickle up to the federal level start at the state level.
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