Robert Havasy thinks a lot about how AI is used in health care and where policymakers should step in over the coming months and years. As senior director of informatics strategy at the Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society, also known as HIMSS, a nonprofit that helps bring tech to care, he hears from a broad swath of the industry as well as from the government. He recently spoke with Daniel about how he sees AI changing the business. This interview has been edited for length and clarity. Will AI blow up the health care system as we know it? A lot of things are going to be different — if that counts as blowing it up. Different could be better, different could be worse. You have the people who believe firmly that certain doom is around the corner. But then you have people on the other end of the spectrum that say machines can always do everything better and more reliably than humans. I don't know that I can say it’s going to blow things up, but it’s going to change a lot — and health care does not react well to change. Is Washington ready for this? This is one of the few topics where everybody wants to jump immediately. There are a number of bills floating around Congress. Especially since we're coming to an election year, everybody wants to act — but it feels more like governments are trying to react without really having the time to think it through. Do you think governments should be taking small steps, then? I think so. Does that make me an incrementalist? At the very least, a helpful framework has been: Is this going to create an inconvenience — the kind of problem that politicians often like to solve — or is this going to cause catastrophic harm to individuals or to society? And they probably require different levels of intervention and different speeds of intervention. What I’m not sure we’re good at is discriminating between the two.
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