You may receive a call from someone like Anna to schedule your next health check. A friendly voice that will help you prepare for your appointment and answer any pressing questions you may have.
With her calm and warm attitude, Ana was trained to reassure her patients – unlike many nurses in the US, she can also chat 24-7 in multiple languages, from Hindi to Haitian Creole.
That’s why Anna is not human,but, Artificial Intelligence Program Created by Hippocratic AI New Company It provides a way to automate the time-consuming tasks that nurses and medical assistants typically perform.
It is the most visible sign AI’s invasion of healthcarewhere hundreds of hospitals use it More and more sophisticated computer programs Work previously handled by nurses and other healthcare professionals to monitor patient vital signs, flag emergencies, and trigger staged action plans for care.
The hospital says AI is helping nurses work more efficiently while dealing with burnout and staffing shortages. However, nursing unions argue that this poorly understood technique puts nurse expertise first and lowers the quality of patients.
“The hospital was waiting for a moment when something seemed to be justified enough to replace nurses,” said Michelle Mahon of National Nurses United. “The entire ecosystem is designed to automate, skill and ultimately replace caregivers.”
In March 2025, images from the website of artificial intelligence company Xoltar show two demo vats for making video calls with patients. (Xoltar via AP)
Mahon’s group, the largest nursing coalition in the United States, is helping to organize more than 20 demonstrations in hospitals across the country and seeking the right to speak out about how AI is used. The group raised a new alarm in January Robert F. Kennedy Jr.the incoming health secretary suggested that AI nurses could help provide care in rural areas “as good as any doctor.” on friday, Dr. Mehmet Ozwho was appointed to oversee Medicare and Medicaid, said that the AI thinks it can “free doctors and nurses from all documents.”
Hippocratic AI initially promoted a $9 hour rate for AI assistants, compared to around $40 per hour for registered nurses. Since then, they have tried to drop that language and promote the service instead, ensuring that the customer has been carefully tested. The company did not accept the interview request.
Hospital AI can generate false alarms and dangerous advice
Hospitals have been experimenting with technologies designed to improve care and streamline costs, such as sensors, microphones and motion sensing cameras. Currently, data are linked to electronic medical records and are analysed to predict medical issues and direct nurse care.
In this photo, provided by National Nurse United, nurses held a rally in San Francisco on April 22, 2024, highlighting safety concerns regarding the use of artificial intelligence in healthcare. (National nurse united via AP)
Adam Hart worked in the emergency room at Dienity Health in Henderson, Nevada. The hospital’s computer system has flagged new arrival patients due to sepsis, a life-threatening response to infection. Under hospital protocols, he was soon to administer large amounts of IV fluid. However, after further testing, Hart determined that he was treating dialysis patients or people with kidney failure. Such patients should be managed carefully to avoid overloading fluids in the kidneys.
Hart raised concerns with the supervising nurse but was told to follow standard protocols. Only after the intervention by a nearby doctor would patients begin receiving a slow infusion of IV fluid.
“You need to maintain the limit of your thinking, which is why you’re paid as a nurse,” Hart said. “It’s reckless and dangerous to carry over the thought process to these devices.”
Hart and other nurses say they understand the goals of AI. It’s about nurses monitoring multiple patients and responding to issues quickly. However, the reality is often a barrage of false alarms, and as an emergency, it can accidentally flag basic physical functions such as patients with intestinal movements.
This photo features National Nurse United, Melissa Beeb, Foreground and other nurses holding a meeting in San Francisco on April 22, 2024, highlighting safety concerns regarding the use of artificial intelligence in healthcare. (National nurse united via AP)
“You’re trying to focus on your work, but then you’re getting all these distracting alerts that may or may not mean something,” said Melissa Beebe, a cancer nurse at UC Davis Medical Center in Sacramento. “It’s hard to know when it’s accurate and not because of a lot of false alarms.”
Can AI be supported at hospitals?
Even the most sophisticated technology misses signs nurses pick up on a daily basis, such as facial expressions and odors, says Michelle Collins, dean of the Faculty of Nursing at Loyola University. But people aren’t perfect either.
“It’s stupid to turn your back on this completely,” Collins said. “We should accept what we can do to enhance care, but we also need to be aware that it will not replace the human element.”
More than 100,000 nurses have left the workforce during the Covid-19 pandemic. As the US population and nurses retire, the US government estimates that by 2032 there will be more than 190,000 new openings for nurses each year.
In the face of this trend, hospital administrators will see that AI plays a key role. Rather than taking over care, we help nurses and doctors gather information and communicate with patients.
“Sometimes they talk to humans, and sometimes they don’t.”
At the University of Arkansas Medical Sciences in Little Rock, staff members need to make hundreds of calls each week to prepare patients for surgery. The nurse will review information about prescriptions, heart condition, and other issues such as sleep apnea that need to be carefully reviewed prior to anesthesia.
Problem: Many patients answer calls only in the evening, usually during dinner and during the child’s bedtime.
“So all we need to do is find a way to call hundreds of people into the 120-minute window, but I really don’t want to work overtime with my staff to do so,” said Dr. Joseph Sanford, who oversees the center’s health.
Since January, hospitals have used Qventus AI assistants to contact patients and healthcare providers, send and receive medical records, and summarise human staff’s contents. Qventus says 115 hospitals use the technology. It aims to boost hospital revenues with faster surgical transformations, fewer cancellations and fewer burnouts.
Each call begins with the program identifying it as an AI assistant.
“We always want to be completely transparent with our patients, but sometimes we talk to humans, and sometimes we don’t,” Sanford said.
Companies like Qventus offer management services, but other AI developers see a big role in technology.
Israeli startup Xoltar specializes in human-like avatars making video calls with patients. The company is an AI assistant who teaches patients cognitive techniques to manage chronic pain and works with Mayo Clinic. The company is also developing avatars to help smokers quit. According to Xoltar, patients had about 14 minutes of discussion with the program during early testing.
Nursing professionals studying AI say such programs may work for people who are relatively healthy and active about their own care. But that’s not for most people in the healthcare system.
“They’re not just going to be able to get into,” said Rochelle Fritz of the University of California, Davis School of Nursing.
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The Associated Press School of Health Sciences is supported by the Howard Hughes Medical Institution’s Science and Education Media Group and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. AP is solely responsible for all content.