Artificial intelligence (AI) has become more common in healthcare, especially in nursing. As AI tools like automated decision support and workflow systems are used more quickly, healthcare groups in the United States need to manage this technology carefully. Nurses, medical administrators, owners, and IT staff must know the ethical rules and risk management plans that make sure AI helps provide safe and fair patient care while protecting patients’ rights.
This article reviews the main points about ethical governance and risk management in using AI in nursing. It explains the role nurses and healthcare groups have in using AI responsibly and gives practical ideas about how AI affects nursing work and patient safety.
The American Nurses Association (ANA) and the World Health Organization (WHO) say AI must support nursing values and never replace human judgment or care. AI should help nurses but not take the place of their knowledge, skills, and thinking. Nurses are still responsible for clinical decisions made with AI help, so rules must clearly say who is accountable.
Ethical governance means creating rules and policies to guide how AI is made, used, and managed in healthcare. WHO’s first global report on AI in health lists six ethical principles important to AI design and use:
Medical leaders, IT managers, and owners must make sure these rules are followed when they bring AI into their organizations.
Nurses work closely with patients, so their role in AI governance is important. According to an article in Nursing Outlook, nurses must:
AI bias has real effects. For example, some stroke risk models work worse for Black patients and women than for White patients and men. If AI bias is not fixed, it could make health inequities bigger. So, ethical rules should include checking for bias, using diverse data for AI training, and ongoing review to keep fairness and safety.
The 2025 American Association of Colleges of Nursing (AACN) Thought Leaders said AI governance is a major patient safety risk. Risks include:
To manage these risks, healthcare groups should:
The N.U.R.S.E.S. framework, created by Stephanie Hoelscher and Ashley Pugh, guides nurses to learn about AI safely and well. It includes:
AI literacy helps nurses stay in control of care, think carefully about AI results, and explain AI’s role to patients.
Across the United States, AI-driven automation is growing in healthcare. New tools help with front-office tasks like scheduling, phone triage, and communication. For example, Simbo AI creates phone systems powered by AI that lower call wait times, manage patient flow better, and free nurses from routine admin work.
Automated answering and phone systems help nursing work by:
But these AI tools can raise ethical and practical issues. Automation must keep patient data safe, follow HIPAA rules, and be clear about AI’s role in communication. Nurses and admin staff should help set up these systems to include clinical knowledge in AI processes.
The United States is making policies to balance new AI tools with patient safety. For example, the AACN recommends roles like Chief Nurse Data Ethics Officers and AI oversight committees with nurses involved, to watch over ethical AI use.
HIPAA rules still guide data privacy, but AI adds new challenges, especially with data from wearables and AI communication tools. Organizations must protect data carefully, train staff on rules, and review practices regularly.
Federal programs like the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality’s (AHRQ) AI in Healthcare Safety Program look for AI risks and share best ideas. Healthcare leaders and IT managers should follow these efforts and add their advice to policies.
Even with more AI, nursing care basics—kindness, trust, and human connection—must stay important. The ANA says AI can help with tasks and diagnosis, but no technology replaces relationships nurses have with patients.
Nurses must make sure AI helps, not hurts, caring actions. This means:
Leadership and ongoing learning are key to keeping this balance. As nurse expert Michael P. Cary said, “AI will not replace doctors and nurses but, doctors and nurses that use AI will replace those that do not.”
AI can both help and harm healthcare fairness. Reports from the 2025 Thought Leaders Assembly and WHO warn that AI trained mostly on data from wealthier and majority groups may work poorly for racial minorities, women, and other neglected groups.
For example, stroke prediction models showed big errors linked to patient race and gender. This unfairness could make good care less available for vulnerable people.
Healthcare leaders in the U.S. must:
As AI grows in clinical and front-office work, teaching patients about AI is more important. Nurses should explain:
This openness helps reduce patient worries and supports good decisions about AI use. Nurses who explain AI help build trust and make patients safer with technology.
AI technology is changing fast. Healthcare groups must focus on ongoing education and training for everyone using AI.
This includes:
Such education helps keep staff able to use AI safely and keep good patient care.
Using artificial intelligence responsibly in nursing needs careful ethical rules, risk management, and ongoing learning. In the U.S., medical leaders, owners, and IT managers must apply principles that protect patient rights, make care safe, and promote fairness while using AI to improve efficiency and care results.
Nurses play an important role not just in using AI tools, but in shaping AI rules, pushing for ethics, and teaching patients. AI tools in nursing—from decision support to front-office automation—offer real benefits but must be used thoughtfully and monitored closely.
Healthcare groups that use AI must keep human judgment and caring at the heart of nursing. They should watch AI’s effects carefully and stay open and fair in AI work. This approach helps make AI a tool that supports nurses and improves care without hurting the main values of healthcare.
AI literacy is crucial for nurses to ensure the safe and effective use of AI technologies in patient care, enabling them to enhance decision-making and adapt to evolving healthcare environments.
The N.U.R.S.E.S. framework—Navigate AI basics, Utilize AI strategically, Recognize AI pitfalls, Skills support, Ethics in action, and Shape the future—offers a structured approach for nurses to incorporate AI knowledge and ethics into clinical practice.
By integrating AI principles into both academic curricula and bedside learning, nurses can close the knowledge gap, ensuring proficiency in AI application and ongoing competency development.
Continuous education helps nurses stay updated with AI advances, sharpening their skills to responsibly and competently use AI tools in dynamic healthcare settings.
AI enhances nursing decision-making, supports workflow efficiency, and provides tools for improved patient diagnosis and care management.
Challenges include managing biased data, ensuring ethical application, and overcoming gaps in AI knowledge among nursing staff.
Ethical considerations ensure that AI is used responsibly, protecting patient rights and safety, while maintaining trust and integrity in healthcare delivery.
Nurses influence AI development by advocating for ethical policies, participating in governance, and applying AI tools that prioritize patient and organizational benefits.
Recognizing pitfalls such as bias and misuse enables nurses to mitigate risks, promoting safer AI implementation and safeguarding quality care.
AI literacy empowers nurses to confidently navigate emerging technologies, enhancing their role in care delivery and policy advocacy within healthcare systems.