City
Epaper

Healthcare workers enthusiastic about using GenAI, most firms not ready to adopt: Report

By IANS | Updated: June 13, 2025 18:23 IST

New Delhi, June 13 While healthcare professionals widely recognise the transformative potential of generative AI (GenAI) in solving ...

Open in App

New Delhi, June 13 While healthcare professionals widely recognise the transformative potential of generative AI (GenAI) in solving sustainability problems, including the workforce crisis, most organisations are not yet ready to harness its full value, according to a report on Friday.

The new report from Wolters Kluwer Health identified strong enthusiasm for using GenAI to address the current challenges of workforce shortages, burnout, high healthcare costs, and rising administrative burdens, as well as keen interest in leveraging GenAI to achieve the next level of innovation and efficiency across the enterprise.

However, the data, based on a survey of physicians, nurses, pharmacists, allied health professionals, and administrators, showed a clear disconnect between what organisations say they want to achieve with GenAI and how prepared they are to deliver on that promise.

For example, the report showed that while 80 per cent of respondents cited “optimising workflows” as a top organisational goal, only 63 per cent feel prepared to use GenAI to do so.

“GenAI has the potential to be a powerful tool for supporting sustainability in healthcare organizations right now, as well as preparing them for a more efficient future,” said Greg Samios, CEO of Wolters Kluwer Health.

“The challenge is developing a strategy that can both optimise the current state in a highly volatile environment and simultaneously equip organisations with the digital capabilities they need to remain competitive over the next several years. Right now, organisations are at risk of falling behind unless they take a more cohesive approach to making GenAI standardised, scalable, and impactful,” he added.

The report noted that GenAI-driven technologies are likely to be part of the solution for longstanding challenges, such as addressing the burdens of prior authorisations (67 per cent), electronic health record (EHR) management (62 per cent), cybersecurity preparedness (68 per cent), and supporting telehealth/virtual care programmes (65 per cent).

But only 18 per cent of survey respondents were aware of formal organisational policies governing GenAI use, and only one in five reported being required to take structured training.

As a result, more than half (57 per cent) believe that overreliance on GenAI may erode clinical decision-making skills. The report showed that 55 per cent are concerned that lack of transparency around GenAI’s potential role in making diagnoses could contribute to unclear reasoning behind patient-facing decisions.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

NationalBhagalpur Tragedy: 5 Kanwariyas Killed in Bihar as Pickup Van Carrying DJ Overturns After Hitting Live Wire on Shahkund-Sultanganj Road

NationalShibu Soren, Jharkhand former CM and JMM founder passes away

EntertainmentShekhar Kapur wishes daughter Kaveri on b’day: My greatest wealth is you

NationalShibu Soren Dies at 81: Former Jharkhand CM and Father of Hemant Soren Passes Away

Other SportsHe's desperate to do what it takes: Root says injured Woakes is ready to bat on Day 5 if needed

Health Realted Stories

HealthTelangana ranks number one in organ donation

HealthAre Samosa and Jalebi Really the True Health Villains? India May Have 449 Million Overweight People by 2050

HealthSouth Korea: Heat-related death toll rises to 19 amid extreme heat wave

HealthPunjab to open 200 new Aam Aadmi Clinics, taking total number to 1,081: CM Mann

HealthIs Formula Feeding Pushing Mothers Away From Breastfeeding? Here Are the Benefits Every Newborn’s Mother Should Know