AI decisions can change care paths
Decision support, triage, prior authorisation, and documentation workflows need human oversight and traceable evidence before harm or dispute.
Healthcare AI
Clinical, payer, documentation, coding, scheduling, and administrative AI are already shaping decisions that affect care, payment, privacy, and trust. The risk is not that AI exists. The risk is that no one can prove which controls applied before the decision moved.
Healthcare leaders are being asked to adopt AI while protecting patients, clinicians, revenue integrity, and audit readiness. Post-event policy documents do not help when a workflow has already denied care, exposed protected data, miscoded a claim, or created an unreviewable recommendation.
Decision support, triage, prior authorisation, and documentation workflows need human oversight and traceable evidence before harm or dispute.
Coding, billing, claims, and payer workflows need governed decision boundaries so speed does not become overpayment, denial, or audit risk.
Clinical, behavioural, and administrative data use needs purpose, consent, retention, and transfer controls at the point of action.
Healthcare teams need a record of who owned the action, what rule applied, why it proceeded, and what was blocked or escalated.
OBEXGATE puts governance into the operating path of AI-enabled healthcare workflows. It discovers unmanaged AI, assesses execution risk, enforces controls before actions proceed, and produces evidence leadership can use with compliance, legal, clinical, finance, security, and audit teams.
Surface unmanaged tools, decision points, vendors, data flows, owners, and control gaps before they become invisible liability.
Use EVF to assess oversight, evidence quality, drift, gate integrity, legal exposure, and operational readiness.
Return Allow, Warn, Hold, Block, or Stop when a workflow lacks authority, evidence, review, or permitted-use support.
Capture the rule, owner, verifier separation, decision basis, override, remediation path, and final outcome at runtime.