On January 7, 2025, in the last weeks of the Biden Administration and before President Trump returned to the White House, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) issued draft guidance, entitled “Considerations for the Use of Artificial Intelligence To Support Regulatory Decision-Making for Drug and Biological Products.” This guidance provides recommendations on the use of AI intended to support a regulatory decision about a drug or biological product’s safety, effectiveness, or quality. The guidance discusses the use of AI models in the nonclinical, clinical, post-marketing, and manufacturing phases of the drug product life cycle. This is the first time FDA has proposed draft guidance on the use of AI for the development of drug and biological products and may provide insight on how AI models in medical product regulation should be assessed. The FDA is seeking public comment on the proposed guidance by April 7, 2025. Continue Reading FDA Proposes Framework to Assess AI Model Output Credibility to Support Regulatory Decision-Making

Tai Williams
Tai is an associate in Crowell & Moring’s Washington, D.C., office and a member of the firm’s Health Care and International Dispute Resolution groups. In her health care practice, Tai counsels and represents managed care organizations, insurers, health care providers, and health care technology companies in various regulatory, transactional, and litigation matters.
Healthcare Providers Who Engage in Information Blocking Will Face Disincentives Described in an HHS Final Rule
On June 24, 2024, the Department of Health and Human Services (“HHS”) released a final rule (“Disincentives Final Rule”) establishing disincentives for certain healthcare providers that have committed information blocking. The information blocking disincentives directly impact Medicare-enrolled healthcare providers or suppliers including hospitals, critical access hospitals, MIPS-eligible clinicians, and ACOs. The Disincentives Final Rule has been submitted to the Office of the Federal Register for publication and will become effective 30 days after Federal Register publication.Continue Reading Healthcare Providers Who Engage in Information Blocking Will Face Disincentives Described in an HHS Final Rule