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UCSF Health and the UCSF Division of Clinical Informatics and Digital Transformation, with a $5 million gift from Ken and Kathy Hao, aim to ensure the efficacy and safety of artificial intelligence used in clinical care by building a platform that continuously reports on whether a tool is achieving its intended results, or if it needs improvements. The researchers said the platform will flag if a tool is potentially dangerous or risks worsening health disparities, prompting immediate action when necessary. Called the Impact Monitoring Platform for AI in Clinical Care, USCF Health and the DoC-IT will design IMPACC to report on the effectiveness of artificial intelligence in clinical decision-making and patient care as well as potential risks to patient health and exacerbating health disparities.

Once they develop IMPACC, UCSF Health will test its use with a set of AI tools currently used for clinical care, according to an from the researchers. Julia Adler-Milstein, head of the UCSF DoC-IT, and Dr. Sara Murray, chief health AI officer at UCSF Health, will lead the collaborative effort in order to improve patient care at UCSF while advancing the science of how to assess AI tools in real-world use, they said.



"By building IMPACC, we will take a major leap forward in how we analyze AI’s performance in healthcare," Murray said in a statement. "As we deploy new AI technologies, this novel, scalable platform will provide our health system with direct and actionable insights into on.

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