Stronger safeguards needed as AI healthcare grows in Europe, WHO warns

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World Health Organisation

Stronger safeguards needed as AI healthcare grows in Europe, WHO warns

Almost two-thirds of European countries, including Ireland, are already using AI-assisted diagnostics.

7.22am, 19 Nov 2025

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THE GROWING USE of artificial intelligence in healthcare necessitates stronger legal and ethical safeguards to protect patients and healthcare workers, the World Health Organisationโ€™s Europe branch said in a report published today.

That is the conclusion of a report on AI adoption and regulation in healthcare systems in Europe, based on responses from 50 of the 53 member states in the WHOโ€™s European region, which includes Central Asia.

Only four countries, or 8%, have adopted a dedicated national AI health strategy, and seven others are in the process of doing so, the report said.

โ€œWe stand at a fork in the road,โ€ Natasha Azzopardi-Muscat, the WHO Europeโ€™s director of health systems, said in a statement.

โ€œEither AI will be used to improve peopleโ€™s health and well-being, reduce the burden on our exhausted health workers and bring down healthcare costs, or it could undermine patient safety, compromise privacy and entrench inequalities in care,โ€ she said.

Almost two-thirds of countries in Europe are already using AI-assisted diagnostics, especially in imaging and detection, while half of countries have introduced AI chatbots for patient engagement and support.

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The Mater Hospital in Dublin recently began using artificial intelligence across its radiology department.

Itโ€™s used to analyse all head scans for bleeds, all chest scans for blood clots, and all bone x-rays for fractures, to make sure patients with the most urgent needs are seen first.

In September, the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland (RCSI) began offering an AI in Healthcare course. Trinity College Dublin launched a similar course earlier this year.

The WHO urged its member states to address โ€œpotential risksโ€ associated with AI, including โ€œbiased or low-quality outputs, automation bias, erosion of clinician skills, reduced clinicianโ€“patient interaction and inequitable outcomes for marginalised populationsโ€.

Regulation is struggling to keep pace with technology, the WHO Europe said, noting that 86 percent of member states said legal uncertainty was the primary barrier to AI adoption.

โ€œWithout clear legal standards, clinicians may be reluctant to rely on AI tools and patients may have no clear path for recourse if something goes wrong,โ€ said David Novillo Ortiz, the WHOโ€™s regional advisor on data, artificial intelligence and digital health.

The WHO Europe said countries should clarify accountability, establish redress mechanisms for harm, and ensure that AI systems โ€œare tested for safety, fairness and real-world effectiveness before they reach patientsโ€.

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