National Council on Disability

03/04/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 03/04/2026 10:02

NCD warns Senate committee on danger of importing bias into healthcare through AI

NCD warns Senate committee on danger of importing bias into healthcare through AI

Wednesday, March 4, 2026

March 4, 2026

WASHINGTON-The National Council on Disability submitted a statement for the record Tuesday to the U.S. Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation's Subcommittee on Science, Manufacturing, and Competitiveness regarding the use of artificial intelligence for its recent hearing, "Less Hype, More Help: AI That Improves Safety, Productivity, and Care."

NCD, as an independent, bipartisan federal agency responsible for advising Congress, the President and federal agencies on disability policy, recommended for policymakers to be aware of the susceptibility of AI to develop explicit and implicit biases about people with disabilities and take steps to help avoid these biases from being learned.

"While NCD's research recognizes the potential benefits of utilizing AI to improve healthcare outcomes for people with disabilities, there exist some vulnerabilities in these technologies that could negatively impact the diagnosis and treatment of people with disabilities and provide policymakers with erroneous information rather than accurate solutions," wrote NCD Acting Chairman Neil Romano.

Specifically, since AI is intended to develop the same decision-making capabilities as humans, in its statement, NCD cautioned that AI technologies may inadvertently develop the same assumptions and biases about people with disabilities as healthcare professionals are already well-documented to harbor. For this reason, NCD advised establishment of regulation to ensure that AI is developed with data sets that include people with disabilities.

NCD's 2024 report, "The Implicit and Explicit Exclusion of People with Disabilities in Clinical Trials," analyzed the use of AI in clinical trials.

"Our 2024 report found that a contributing factor to health care disparity outcomes for people with disabilities was physicians' erroneous assumptions about the values and expectations of their patients, assumptions that mirror widespread, stigmatized societal views about the disabled," wrote Romano. "Due to these concerns, NCD found that disability cultural competence should be a core strategy for the healthcare system in order to reduce healthcare disparities for people with disabilities.

Read the full statement at NCD.gov.

National Council on Disability published this content on March 04, 2026, and is solely responsible for the information contained herein. Distributed via Public Technologies (PUBT), unedited and unaltered, on March 04, 2026 at 16:02 UTC. If you believe the information included in the content is inaccurate or outdated and requires editing or removal, please contact us at [email protected]