A digitalization initiative launching by June 2026 will use GenAI to cut admin burden, improve safety, and standardize AI‑driven care processes.
In line with its long-term plan to enhance both care quality and operational sustainability through the safe use of generative AI (GenAI), a hospital in Japan had embarked on a major digital transformation effort designed to make medical documentation and workforce management more efficient.
On 13 February 2026, Japan Community Healthcare Organization Osaka Hospital, a key regional medical provider, announced their initiative to overcome challenges that are common across Japan’s healthcare sector — an aging workforce; uneven digital literacy among staff; and the growing administrative load of clinical documentation. These pressures had been making it difficult for its physicians and nurses to focus on patient care while maintaining compliance and efficiency.
To address these needs, Osaka Hospital launched a project to GenAI into daily hospital operations, focusing first on labor-intensive workflows. The initiative is guided by the dual goals of reducing repetitive tasks and ensuring that new technology is adopted safely and ethically.
Key elements of the project, scheduled for launch in June 2026, will include:
- Using GenAI to assist in preparing discharge summaries and summarizing nursing handovers
- Establishing a framework for data governance that defines how medical data and AI outputs are managed, with strong emphasis on security and privacy
- Training multidisciplinary “digital ambassadors” within the hospital to encourage responsible AI practices and identify new clinical use cases.
- Developing hospital-wide guidelines and education programs to improve staff digital literacy and ensure consistent use of generative AI tools
According to Dr Ryuji Hamamoto, Representative Director, Japanese Association for Medical Artificial Intelligence, the agency endorsing the project, the digital transformation “safely implements GenAI for clinical document creation, and integrates governance and education. Ensuring safety, reducing the burden on those working in the field, and improving quality is extremely important.”
According to a press release by Fujitsu Japan, the firm consulting on the technical implementation of the project, the project’s goal is “prioritizing safety and security in medical settings… and establishing “continuous utilization of generative AI”, as well as to “systematize operational governance for GenAI utilization, adhering to legal and ethical considerations… and facilitate its expansion into clinical domains, and continuously advance healthcare digitalization.”