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AI on the operating table: What is legal and who is responsible?

What is actually legal when it comes to healthcare and medical devices that use artificial intelligence? Do you feel like the question is giving you a bit of a headache? Then this is the webinar for you!

Get help to ask the right questions about the regulations and AI in health. Watch the recording from December 6.

Webinar: What does the law say about AI in healthcare?
Lars Andre Strøm Arnesen researches the link between regulations and AI in healthcare.
Everyone who uses an AI system, such as a hospital or a doctor's office, is responsible for having the expertise necessary to actively monitor the system. They must be able to step in when they see an error in the system.

There are many questions that can arise when we begin to unravel the regulations surrounding AI in health.

When it comes to AI in health, who is responsible for what? And who is obliged to do what? What kind of AI is defined as high risk, and what does that mean for the introduction of new services?

We have regulations on AI and medical devices, as well as the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR). AI must act ethically and at the same time make our healthcare services more efficient. There are rules for autonomous systems and for automated data processing.

The regulations surrounding AI in health may seem complicated, but they are crucial to ensure both ethical use and patient safety. This webinar is designed to give you, as a project manager or healthcare professional, a practical understanding of the key rules so you can navigate the landscape with greater confidence and insight.

Presentation by Lars Andre Strøm Arnesen, lawyer and Ph.D. student at the University of Oslo.

Lars holds a law degree from the University of Oslo (2016) and an LL.M in ICT law (2019) from the same place. He has previously worked in the law firm SANDS and as a legal advisor in Dignio, a company that provides digital health solutions. Lars is currently a doctoral fellow at the Center for Legal Informatics, where he researches artificial intelligence and automated medical decisions in the project “RESPIRE”.

Recording

You can download the podcast to your mobile on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or Podbean. Search for "Norwegian Centre for E-health Research".