Healthcare has usually been a field where people rely on human skills and face-to-face patient care. AI tools, like medical dictation helpers and advanced Electronic Health Record (EHR) systems, change this by taking over some tasks. This can make healthcare workers unsure or worried. They might fear losing their jobs, not trust the new technology, or be concerned about how their daily work will change.
To make AI work well, healthcare workplaces need to create a culture that supports learning and change. Stephanie Klein Nagelvoort Schuit, a health care innovation expert, says it is important to build a culture of trying new things and trusting AI. Staff should see AI as a helper, not a threat. Training and workshops give workers the skills and confidence they need to use AI tools properly.
In the U.S., healthcare organizations are different sizes, from small doctor offices to large hospitals. This makes building the right culture harder. Small offices may not have enough money or tech help for training. Big hospitals can be slow to change because they have many departments. Still, changing the culture is important no matter the size of the organization.
Good education is needed for healthcare teams to use AI for dictation and EHR properly. AI doesn’t work well if people just turn it on without understanding it. Everyone who uses AI—doctors, office staff, and IT workers—needs to learn how it works.
Education should cover:
In the U.S., protecting patient data and ethical care are very important. Education must include guidance on these rules. Companies like Epic create AI tools that follow HIPAA and help doctors, not replace them.
AI helps make many healthcare tasks easier, especially office and clinical work. For example, Simbo AI uses AI to answer phone calls at medical offices.
Answering phones takes up a lot of staff time. AI answering services can take routine calls about appointments, questions, and prescription refills. This frees staff to handle harder or more sensitive work. This makes it easier for patients to get help and keeps communication personal.
AI also works with EHR systems like Epic’s AI Charting to reduce time spent on paperwork. Documentation takes a lot of a doctor’s day, leaving less time for patients. AI can write notes, draft messages, or manage lab orders automatically. This speeds up visits and helps reduce stress for doctors.
AI tools can also prepare patient information before visits. They collect histories, summarize past visits, and find risks. This helps doctors have better conversations and use visit time well.
Along with culture and education, healthcare groups need to change how work flows to fit AI tools smoothly.
Using AI responsibly is very important in healthcare. Patient safety and privacy must be protected. In the U.S., the HIPAA law sets strict rules on handling patient data.
Companies like Epic design AI with these rules in mind. Their AI tools, like those using GPT-4, keep information safe and clear. Healthcare leaders must use AI that is explainable, protects privacy, and keeps humans in control.
Organizations should also create clear policies about who is responsible if AI makes mistakes. They need plans for reporting errors and handling liability. While the EU has new AI laws coming, the U.S. relies on current healthcare laws and guidelines but continues to discuss how to govern AI.
Administrators and IT managers who lead AI projects need proper knowledge and skills to manage changes well.
For example, a practice using Simbo AI’s phone answering can track fewer call times, more accurate appointment scheduling, and freed-up staff time for other work.
Epic’s AI Charting shows how AI improves writing clinical notes. Doctors spend less time on paperwork and can focus more on treating patients. This also helps reduce doctor stress and burnout.
By 2024, Epic plans to add AI features that simplify patient messages and prepare lab and prescription orders automatically. These tools will make healthcare work smoother and faster for both patients and providers.
AI will keep adding new ways to change healthcare delivery and management. Changing culture, teaching staff well, redesigning work processes, and following laws will stay important for using AI safely and effectively.
Healthcare groups in the U.S. will need to work hard to grow with AI. But doing this can help reduce paperwork for doctors, improve patient care, and make services more efficient. Leaders who guide their teams through learning and change will have the best chances to use AI to its fullest.
AI is revolutionizing healthcare workflows by embedding intelligent features directly into EHR systems, reducing time on documentation and administrative tasks, enhancing clinical decision-making, and freeing clinicians to focus more on patient care.
Epic integrates AI through features like generative AI and ambient intelligence that assist with documentation, patient communication, medical coding, and prediction of patient outcomes, aiming for seamless, efficient clinician workflows while maintaining HIPAA compliance.
AI Charting automates parts of clinical documentation to speed up note creation and reduce administrative burdens, allowing clinicians more time for patient interaction and improving the accuracy and completeness of medical records.
Epic plans to incorporate generative AI that aids clinicians by revising message responses into patient-friendly language, automatically queuing orders for prescriptions and labs, and streamlining communication and care planning.
AI personalizes patient interactions by generating clear communication, summarizing handoffs, and providing up-to-date clinical insights, which enhances understanding, adherence, and overall patient experience.
Epic focuses on responsible AI through validation tools, open-source AI model testing, and embedding privacy and security best practices to maintain compliance and trust in sensitive healthcare environments.
‘Comet’ is an AI-driven healthcare intelligence platform by Epic that analyzes vast medical event data to predict disease risk, length of hospital stay, treatment outcomes, and other clinical insights, guiding informed decisions.
Generative AI automates repetitive tasks such as drafting clinical notes, responding to patient messages, and coding assistance, significantly reducing administrative burden and enabling clinicians to prioritize patient care.
Future AI agents will perform preparatory work before patient visits, optimize data gathering, and assist in visit documentation to enhance productivity and the overall effectiveness of clinical encounters.
Healthcare organizations must foster a culture of experimentation and trust in AI, encouraging staff to develop AI expertise and adapt workflows, ensuring smooth adoption and maximizing AI’s benefits in clinical settings.