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​​Half of US hospitals to adopt generative AI by end of 2025, study finds

Nearly one in three nonfederal acute care hospitals in the U.S. reported using generative artificial intelligence integrated into their electronic health record in 2024, according to a national survey analysis published Dec. 12 in JAMA Network Open.

The findings are based on a survey of 2,174 nonfederal U.S. acute care hospitals using data from the 2024 American Hospital Association Information Technology Supplement, fielded from April through September.

Key findings from the survey include:

  • Thirty-one point five percent of hospitals reported current use of generative AI integrated into the EHR, while 24.7% said they planned to adopt it within a year — suggesting about half of U.S. hospitals could be using the technology by the end of 2025.
  • Forty-three point seven percent of hospitals were classified as delayed adopters, meaning they reported no plans to implement generative AI, expected adoption in five years or were unsure.
  • Adoption was more common among health system–affiliated and teaching hospitals, as well as hospitals using Epic EHRs. Independent hospitals and those with a high share of Medicaid discharges were somewhat less likely to report adoption or near-term plans.
  • Hospitals with prior experience using predictive AI were significantly more likely to adopt generative AI, though those with the most robust AI evaluation practices tended to move more cautiously.

The post ​​Half of US hospitals to adopt generative AI by end of 2025, study finds appeared first on Becker’s Hospital Review | Healthcare News & Analysis.

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