Exclusive: Hippocratic AI partners with academia to create curriculum for AI use in healthcare

Hippocratic AI and Adtalem’s Chamberlain University and Walden University will develop a certification program for nurses to evaluate and assess AI use in healthcare.
By Jessica Hagen
08:00 am
Share

Photo: Marco VDM/Getty Images

Hippocratic AI, a generative AI company developing safety-focused large language models for healthcare, is partnering with Adtalem Global Education to create an academic curriculum to train and certify clinicians on the use of AI in healthcare.

"What we wanted to do is develop a curriculum that really educates nurses around general introductions to artificial intelligence and generative AI, which are very different kinds of tools and technologies how we can integrate AI into clinical workflows and the ethical and legal regulatory considerations of using generative AI in healthcare?" Dr. Meenesh Bhimani, cofounder and chief medical officer at Hippocratic AI, told MobiHealthNews

"By giving this foundation of knowledge to nurses, we hope it empowers them to not only be able to critically assess new technology that comes out, but also really understand how they can engage with the technology to affect patient outcomes and patient care."

Hippocratic AI will partner with Adtalem’s Chamberlain University and Walden University to combine Adtalem's clinical knowledge and Hippocratic's technical know-how to jointly develop a curriculum and certification program that helps nurses understand how to use, integrate and oversee AI systems effectively in healthcare. 

Potential topics that will be covered within the curriculum include:

  • Introduction to AI: Understanding the basics of AI, its history and its impact on various industries, with a focus on healthcare.

  • Types of AI and applications: An overview of different types of AI, including machine learning, deep learning and generative AI, and their applications in healthcare settings.

  • Generative AI basics: A deep dive into the principles of generative AI, how it works and its potential uses in clinical practice.

  • Generative AI in nursing: Specific applications of generative AI in nursing, including patient care, diagnostics and personalized treatment planning.

  • Ethical considerations: Discuss the ethical implications of AI in healthcare, including privacy, bias and the responsible use of AI technologies.

  • AI tools and technologies: An introduction to the various AI tools and platforms currently available to clinicians, with practical demonstrations.

  • Collaboration with AI: Strategies for integrating AI into clinical workflows, enhancing collaboration between AI systems and healthcare professionals.

  • Future trends in AI and nursing: Exploration of emerging trends in AI technology and how they might shape the future of nursing and healthcare.

"We're starting the discussions around exactly how the certification is going to look, but it will be a series of courses, lectures that people take, and there will be a certification at the end of it, but the exact details of the length and more are still being worked out," Bhimani said. 

"Part of the core curriculum will be understanding some of the downfalls and concerns around AI and generative AI, and how, when you assess the tools, to ensure that those are addressed within any tool you're evaluating."

The curriculum will be designed with foundation modules and updated over time as AI technology progresses. 

THE LARGER TREND

Since its launch in 2023, Hippocratic AI has touted itself as an organization focused on the responsible use of AI in healthcare while addressing the needs of nurses. Bhimani said this is done by working closely with the nursing community.

In February, the company launched its Nurse Advisory Council to ensure the safe development of LLM software, which would work closely with its Physician Advisory Council launched less than six months before.

"We've worked with the nursing community since day one. It's part of our DNA and fundamentally speaks to our mission of improving patient care and patient outcomes," Bhimani said. 

"Very early on, we decided we were not going to build a product for healthcare; we were going to build it with healthcare. So, from day one, we asked for deep involvement from our partners (nurses and other clinicians) to help us build the right product."

The partners expect the curriculum and certification program to be integrated into Chamberlain University and Walden University in Spring 2025. 

Share