Accountability in Practice: Responsible AI Use in Healthcare

AI is already shaping health plan operations, from utilization management and care management to member communications and administrative decision-making.

Congressional Report Language Highlights the Role of Accreditation in Responsible Health Care AI

As artificial intelligence becomes more common in health care, policymakers are paying closer attention to how organizations develop, deploy and use AI…

URAC CEO Shawn Griffin Joins Analyzing Healthcare to Discuss Accreditation, Telehealth and AI Governance

URAC President and CEO Shawn Griffin, MD, recently joined Roy Bejarano, CEO of SCALE Healthcare, on the Analyzing Healthcare podcast to discuss…

URAC Launches “Health Care, Meet AI” Video Series

Artificial intelligence is already changing how people experience health care. Patients are using chatbots to ask health questions.

Shawn Griffin: Health Care AI Needs Accountability, Not More Hype

AI is already influencing health care, from clinical documentation and patient communication to risk prediction and workflow support.

AI in Emergency Medicine Raises Questions Around Oversight and Accountability

As artificial intelligence tools continue moving into clinical environments, emergency departments are becoming a key example of both the potential benefits and…

AI and Specialty Pharmacy: Focusing on Quality and Oversight

AI is quickly becoming part of how specialty pharmacies operate, influencing workflows, patient engagement and care management. In this article from Pharmacy…

Building Trust in AI: A Practical Guide for Health Care Leaders

In this previously recorded webinar, URAC and Ellipsis Health demystified the world of AI in health care and shared the tools you…

URAC’s Health Care AI Accreditation Highlighted as a National Standard for 2026

As interest in artificial intelligence accelerates across health care, organizations are increasingly looking for independent, trusted frameworks to guide responsible AI use.

Health Care AI in 2026: Governance and Trust Take Center Stage

As health care organizations enter 2026, artificial intelligence is moving from experimental to core infrastructure across clinical, operational and administrative functions.