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National Coordinator for Health IT Micky Tripathi, shown here speaking at HIMSS22, stepped down from the Coalition for Healthcare AI after being named Acting Chief AI Officer for U.S. Health & Human Services on May 24, 2024, he said Tuesday.

Photo: HIMSS Mickey Tripathi, U.S. National Coordinator for Health IT, and Troy Tazbaz, the U.



S. Food and Drug Administration's digital health director, stepped down from the Coalition for Health AI last week. While the announcement followed concerns raised by Republican lawmakers – by letter last month to FDA and directly with its Center for Devices and Radiological Health during a May Congressional hearing looking at medical device regulation – the agencies say AI development efforts by the coalition and Administration in 2024 brought the regulators' level of involvement in CHAI to the finish line.

When CHAI cofounder Dr. Brian Anderson, chief digital health physician at MITRE, discussed the collaborative's with on HIMSSTV, he said CHAI started with academics and non-profits to build trustworthy AI. When the coalition launched nearly two years ago – because there was no consensus on best practices around how to manage the development, implementation and maintenance of health AI – it became clear quickly that government regulators were needed at the table.

By August 2023, Anderson said more than 700 organizations signed onto the public-private partnership for AI innovation. Today, there are thousands, according to a spokesperson .

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