Health and Human Services issues new AI strategy for healthcare
Updated
Updated · Daily Caller · May 10
Health and Human Services issues new AI strategy for healthcare
6 articles · Updated · Daily Caller · May 10
The December 2025 plan says the agency will use AI to boost efficiency, support US innovation and improve patient outcomes as adoption spreads across cancer care.
Experts said AI can sharpen detection, imaging analysis and diagnosis, citing studies in radiology, mammography and pancreatic cancer screening, while helping clinicians process vast medical literature and patient data.
Researchers and policy groups also warn system errors could harm patients, even as 25% of Americans report using AI tools or chatbots for health information or advice.
As AI revolutionizes medicine, how can we prevent it from amplifying historical biases in patient care?
With AI outperforming doctors in trials, what is the future role for human judgment in medicine?
When an AI misdiagnoses cancer, who is legally responsible: the doctor, hospital, or the tech company?
"Transforming HHS: The 'OneHHS' AI Strategy and Its 271+ AI Deployments for Healthcare Innovation and Efficiency"
Overview
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) launched the 'OneHHS' AI Strategy in December 2025, marking a pivotal step in its digital transformation. This strategy is designed to harness artificial intelligence to empower the HHS workforce, drive innovation across major divisions like the CDC, CMS, FDA, and NIH, and ultimately improve public services. By focusing on efficiency and effective technology use, 'OneHHS' aims to transform internal operations, research, and public health delivery, reflecting HHS's commitment to modernizing how it serves the nation.