• How healthcare practices should evaluate AI vendors

    From TechnologyDaily@1337:1/100 to All on Wed Jun 17 09:00:38 2026
    How healthcare practices should evaluate AI vendors

    Date:
    Wed, 17 Jun 2026 07:52:47 +0000

    Description:
    Healthcare practices adopting AI must prioritize security, compliance, accountability, and operational reliability.

    FULL STORY ======================================================================Copy link Facebook X Whatsapp Reddit Pinterest Flipboard Threads Email Share this article 0 Join the conversation Follow us Add us as a preferred source on Google Newsletter Subscribe to our newsletter Artificial intelligence can
    play a transformative role in growing a successful dental practice , but only if it is implemented with the same rigor applied to patient care.

    The market is moving fast. The AI-in-dentistry sector was valued at roughly $460 million in 2024 and is projected to surpass $3 billion within a decade. Approximately one in three U.S. dental practices has already adopted some
    form of AI-powered technology. Among those, about 77% report measurable improvements in workflow efficiency and diagnostic support. The momentum is real. The enthusiasm is warranted. And thats what makes careful vendor evaluation so critical. Latest Videos From Watch full video here: Abhi Sharma Social Links Navigation

    Chief Technology Officer at Weave. For every vendor claiming to "transform your front office," many key questions remain unanswered: Who owns your data? What happens when the system fails? And who is accountable when patient trust is compromised?

    Across the industry, we see practices entering agreements with vendors who underestimate the operational, regulatory, and reputational consequences of platform failure. To that end, any vendor that requests patient data should
    be evaluated against the following five categories. You may like Before you roll out more AI, answer this: Who's accountable? AI Agents at your service The pilot phase is over. Heres whats next for enterprise AI automation Data Ownership and Trust Architecture Data integrity and privacy are the
    foundation of patient trust, not just a technical concern. Healthcare data is among the most sensitive and most targeted information in existence. Between 2015 and 2022, healthcare accounted for 32% of all recorded U.S. data
    breaches across every industry sector, nearly double the rate seen in financial services.

    A single breach in the healthcare sector now costs an average of $9.77 million. Thats more than twice the cross-industry average. Are you a pro? Subscribe to our newsletter Sign up to the TechRadar Pro newsletter to get
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    your information you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy and are aged 16 or over.

    At a minimum, a potential vendor should be able to clearly and confidently answer three non-negotiable questions: Who owns the data? How is it protected between customers? And what is the full lifecycle of that data from ingestion to deletion?

    Reputable vendors will provide clear, accessible explanations of how they handle sensitive information. To validate their claims, dig deeper. Do you treat subscriber data as confidential and contractually restrict its use? Do you sell personal information or share it for marketing purposes?

    How are consent and opt-in records for patient communication protected? If AI models are improved using interaction data, is that data de-identified, aggregated, tenant-specific, or shared broadly? Can customers opt out of
    model training, and what are the practical implications? What to read next
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    If a vendor cannot walk you through these answers in a way you fully understand, thats a bad sign. Built-in Compliance, Not Retrofitted Healthcare communication operates under the highest standard of accountability. Compliance cannot be an afterthought, and vendors interacting with patient data should be architected for HIPAA readiness from day one. In 2024 alone, the HHS Office for Civil Rights closed 22 investigations with financial penalties, collecting nearly $13 million in settlements. Enforcement is increasing, and regulators have made clear that third-party vendors and business associates are not exempt from scrutiny.

    Key areas to evaluate: Are they willing to sign a Business Associate
    Agreement (BAA)? Do they have a BAA with their downstream vendors? How do
    they handle texting compliance, including consent capture, opt-out
    mechanisms, and 10DLC registration? What operational safeguards exist to prevent misrouted messages or accidental mass communications?

    Compliance isn't just about avoiding penalties. It's about fostering patient trust with every interaction. Healthcare data breaches now take an average of 279 days to identify and contain. Thats five weeks longer than the cross-industry average. Every day of exposure is a day of reputational risk for your practice. Integration Integrity and System Reliability In dentistry, integration with practice management systems (PMS) is the backbone of operational success. Unauthorized or poorly designed integrations introduce both security vulnerabilities and operational instability. And without proper context, AI systems will produce inconsistent or incorrect outcomes.

    This is not a theoretical concern. When the Change Healthcare ransomware attack disrupted systems in early 2024, it affected billing and claims processing for millions of transactions across thousands of practices for weeks. The failure was not in any one system's AI. It was in the underlying integrations and the absence of documented failure modes.

    A mature vendor should provide: formal agreements and documentation for authorized integrations, a clear roadmap aligned with the PMS platforms you rely on, and defined failure modes (e.g., what happens when the PMS is unavailable, or API limits are reached). As well as monitoring systems that detect integration drift before it becomes downtime. AI is only as effective as the systems it connects to. Without reliable integration, automation becomes a liability instead of an asset. Control, Visibility, and Accountability AI systems interacting with patients must be configurable, measurable, and auditable. Practices cannot afford vague, autonomous systems making patient-facing decisions without oversight.

    At a minimum, you should expect: configuration controls for business rules, hours, routing logic, and escalation paths, as well as complete logs of every interaction and automated action. Role-based access controls to ensure only authorized users can modify behavior, and centralized management for multi-location organizations, with global standards and local flexibility.

    Equally important: AI systems should be designed with clear failure modes and human override paths. Your team must have visibility and control if
    automation fails. Vendors who resist this level of transparency are not protecting their IP they are protecting themselves from accountability. Reliability at Scale In healthcare communications, reliability is not a feature it is a foundation. Downtime disrupts patient access, impacts care continuity, and directly affects revenue. Practices that have implemented AI report a 35% increase in patient satisfaction, but that figure assumes the technology is performing consistently. A system that works 95% of the time in a high-volume practice fails hundreds of interactions per week.

    Vendor maturity matters. Look for indicators of true operational readiness: demonstrated scale across thousands of locations and high interaction
    volumes; high-availability architecture with redundancy, cloud backups , and disaster recovery; proven carrier relationships and compliance with messaging regulations; and transparent support models aligned with your operational needs.

    Early-stage solutions may seem innovative, but without operational
    resilience, they introduce unacceptable risk into your practice. The question is not whether a vendor's technology is impressive in a demo. Its whether it holds up at 8 a.m. on a Monday when your phones start ringing. The Bottom
    Line AI has the potential to meaningfully improve how practices operate and how patients experience care. According to the ADA Health Policy Institute's Q4 2025 report, one-third of dentists reported they were not busy enough and could have treated more patients up from one-quarter of dentists just one year prior. Artificial intelligence can fill those gaps for practice owners, which improves access to care for patients.

    The burden is not on you to become an AI expert. It is on your vendors to prove they are worthy of your trust. If they cannot demonstrate accountability, transparency, and reliability across each of these
    dimensions, then the decision is simple: they are not ready for your
    practice. We feature the best telemedicine software . This article was produced as part of TechRadar Pro Perspectives , our channel to feature the best and brightest minds in the technology industry today.

    The views expressed here are those of the author and are not necessarily those of TechRadarPro or Future plc. If you are interested in contributing find out more here: https://www.techradar.com/pro/perspectives-how-to-submit



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