
Elion Launches Integration of Coalition for Health AI ‘Nutrition Label' Within Vendor Marketplace
NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Elion, the healthcare technology research and intelligence platform for the AI era, announced today a new partnership with the Coalition for Health AI (CHAI), an industry-led coalition committed to developing industry best practices and frameworks to further innovation, safety and security for health AI. As part of this partnership, Elion is beta-launching a new feature: Abridged CHAI model cards now appear on select vendor profiles across its platform.
'As demand for AI adoption accelerates, healthcare leaders need a shared language and set of standards to evaluate solutions responsibly."
To facilitate robust evaluation and accelerate adoption of successful AI solutions, CHAI developed an Applied Model Card framework, and recently established its first Model Card registry to support the rapid growth of model cards, or 'nutrition labels' for health AI, used to simplify procurement among health systems and solution providers. CHAI's model cards have created a more standard way to present foundational information about AI solutions, moving from powerpoint presentations to evidence and value-based procurement.
Elion cofounder and CEO, Bobby Guelich, announced this new functionality at the CHAI Innovation Summit this week. Providing availability of CHAI's Model Cards through the Elion platform helps provider organizations quickly assess an AI model's intended use, oversight processes, and key performance considerations—all in the context of Elion's broader research and marketplace infrastructure.
'As demand for AI adoption accelerates, healthcare leaders need a shared language and set of standards to evaluate solutions responsibly,' said Guelich. 'CHAI's work in this area is foundational, and we're excited to bring their model cards into the day-to-day workflows of technology decision-makers through Elion's marketplace.'
This integration represents the latest step in Elion's mission to equip health systems with the data, tools, and guidance needed to evaluate and implement emerging technologies. The current version includes model cards for a limited set of vendor solutions, with broader availability planned later this year.
'I am thrilled to see our health AI nutrition label advancing effective and responsible health AI,' said Brian Anderson, CHAI's CEO. 'By integrating this with Elion, we are enabling health system AI solution evaluation and allowing decision-makers to easily access Model Cards. CHAI is driven by the expertise of our members and the feedback of our broader health ecosystem and the public. We look forward to working together to unlock the potential benefits of AI, on a foundation of trust, safety, and security."
CHAI model cards were designed to enhance transparency and accountability across the AI lifecycle. By displaying key elements of these cards on vendor profiles, Elion aims to bridge the gap between technical documentation and real-world procurement. Learn more about CHAI model cards here.
About Elion:
Elion is a trusted health IT marketplace and research firm dedicated to empowering healthcare organizations through technology insights and strategic guidance. By bridging the gap between healthcare leaders and innovative solutions, Elion is driving the future of healthcare delivery.
For more information, visit: https://elion.health
About CHAI:
The CHAI (Coalition for Health AI) mission is to be the trusted source of guidelines for Responsible AI in Health. It aims to ensure high-quality care, foster trust among users, and meet the growing healthcare needs. As a coalition bringing together leaders and experts representing health systems, startups, government and patient advocates, CHAI has established working groups focusing on privacy and security, fairness, transparency, usefulness, and safety of AI algorithms.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Forbes
28 minutes ago
- Forbes
New PSA Uses AI Fakery To Warn About AI Fakery
Remember when a boat crew rescued a polar bear last year, but really didn't because the widely ... More shared video was AI-generated? For a greatest-hits parade of viral AI images, just watch a new public service announcement designed to help people spot AI fakery. You'll get such classics as a skydiving baby, the late Pope Francis wearing a designer puffer coat, a boat crew not actually rescuing a polar bear cub and, of course, Will Smith slurping spaghetti. That meme from a couple of years back became an early benchmark of just how far AI images had to go to appear convincing. A lot has changed since then, with AI tools for generating images and videos progressing toward realism at an astounding rate. The advancements open up countless creative possibilities, but with them comes a higher risk that people will confuse fake for real, sometimes with serious consequences. 'At stake is trust in substantiated information and the health of democracy,' said Betsy Morais, acting editor of the Columbia Journalism Review, the magazine for journalists published by Columbia University's Graduate School of Journalism. That's what prompted CJR to launch PSAi, a campaign aimed at helping the public distinguish real from AI-generated. 'For more than a century, photography has been one of the greatest tools journalists have had to establish truth and trust,' reads a description of the campaign. 'But AI-generated images are making it increasingly hard to distinguish real from fake media.' As part of PSAi, CJR partnered with creative agency TBWA\Chiat\Day New York to produce a short, snappy music video that serves as a crash course in AI-spotting basics. The video pairs some of the best-known AI-generated images out there with a song in the style of '90s rap delivering tips that might seem obvious to those attuned to AI oddities, but aren't to the scores who get fooled. 'Extra fingers are a telltale sign, so is skin with the perfect shine,' the lyrics go. 'Flawless hair that's smooth and clean, warped faces in the back of the scene.' To make the video, the TBWA\Chiat\Day team scoured social media platforms to collect AI-generated images ranging from the emotionally charged — a terrified little girl paddling through the floodwaters of Hurricane Katrina holding her dog — to the downright bizarre (I'm looking at you 'Shrimp Jesus'). The images were chosen not only because they were 'liked' and shared widely, but because they misled people into believing they were legitimate. The team animated the images using Runway's AI video generation and alteration tools, specifically its Act-One feature, which makes it possible to animate facial expressions and sync mouth movements with speech. In the case of the PSAi video, image subjects appear to be lip-synching the rap lyrics. 'That's the way you spot AI,' Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg appears to sing as he peeps into a window from outside (remember that one?). An iProov study earlier this year revealed that many people can't spot a deepfake, with 20% of consumers polled saying they don't even know what one is. Dustin Tomes, chief creative officer of TBWA\Chiat\Day New York, stressed that PSAi isn't intended as an anti-AI statement, but an awareness-building toolkit. 'The PSAi is designed to give people simple, effective tools to spot the difference, without requiring too much effort,' Tomes said in a statement. 'This isn't a silver bullet, but by delivering this education in a memorable way, we hope more people will engage and apply these lessons. After all, fake news doesn't spread itself.' The video certainly is attention-grabbing, even without an appearance by the internet's favorite viral 'emotional support kangaroo.' The creative team behind PSAi scoured social media for AI-generated images that were liked and ... More shared widely, like this one of Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg.


TechCrunch
an hour ago
- TechCrunch
Week in Review: Why Anthropic cut access to Windsurf
Welcome back to Week in Review! Got lots for you today, including why Windsurf lost access to Claude, ChatGPT's new features, WWDC 2025, Elon Musk's fight with Donald Trump, and lots more. Have a great weekend! Duh: During an interview at TC Sessions: AI 2025, Anthropic's co-founder had a perfectly reasonable explanation for why the company cut access to Windsurf: 'I think it would be odd for us to be selling Claude to OpenAI,' Chief Science Officer Jared Kaplan said, referring to rumors and reports that OpenAI, its largest competitor, is acquiring the AI coding assistant. Seems like a good reason to me! Everything is the same: Chinese lab DeepSeek released an updated version of its R1 reasoning AI model last week that performs well on a number of math and coding benchmarks. Now some AI researchers are speculating that at least some of the source data it trained on came from Google's Gemini family of AI. WWDC 2025: Apple's annual developers conference starts Monday. Beyond a newly designed operating system, here's what we're expecting to see at this year's event, including a dedicated gaming app and updates to Mac, Watch, TV, and more. This is TechCrunch's Week in Review, where we recap the week's biggest news. Want this delivered as a newsletter to your inbox every Saturday? Sign up here. News Image Credits:Thomas Fuller / SOPA Images / LightRocket / Getty Images Business in the front: ChatGPT is getting new features for business users, including connectors for Dropbox, Box, SharePoint, OneDrive, and Google Drive. This would let ChatGPT look for information across your own services to answer questions. Oh no: Indian grocery delivery startup KiranaPro was hacked, and all of its data was wiped. According to the company, it has 55,000 customers, with 30,000 to 35,000 active buyers across 50 cities, who collectively place 2,000 orders daily. Techcrunch event Save $200+ on your TechCrunch All Stage pass Build smarter. Scale faster. Connect deeper. Join visionaries from Precursor Ventures, NEA, Index Ventures, Underscore VC, and beyond for a day packed with strategies, workshops, and meaningful connections. Save $200+ on your TechCrunch All Stage pass Build smarter. Scale faster. Connect deeper. Join visionaries from Precursor Ventures, NEA, Index Ventures, Underscore VC, and beyond for a day packed with strategies, workshops, and meaningful connections. Boston, MA | REGISTER NOW Artsy people, rejoice! Photoshop is now coming to Android, so users of Google's operating system can gussy up their images, too. The app has a similar set of editing tools as the desktop version, including layering and masking. Let's try that again: Tesla filed new trademark applications for 'Tesla Robotaxi' after previous attempts to trademark the terms 'Robotaxi' and 'Cybercab' failed. Rolling in dough: Tech startup Anduril just picked up a $1 billion investment as part of a new $2.5 billion raise led by Founders Fund, which means Anduril has doubled its valuation to $30.5 billion. On the road again: When Toma's founders realized car dealerships were drowning in missed calls, they hit the road to see the problem firsthand. That summer road trip turned into a $17 million a16z-backed fundraise that helped Toma get its AI phone agents into more than 100 dealerships across the U.S. Fighting season: All gloves were off on Thursday as Elon Musk and President Trump took to their respective social networks to throw jabs at each other. Though it might be exciting to watch rich men squabble in public, the fallout between the world's richest person and a sitting U.S. president promises to have broader implications for the tech industry. Analysis Image Credits:BlackJack3D / Getty Images Money talks: Whether you use AI as a friend, a therapist, or even a girlfriend, chatbots are trained to keep you talking. For Big Tech companies, it's never been more competitive to attract users to their chatbot platforms — and keep them there.


Geek Tyrant
2 hours ago
- Geek Tyrant
This AI-Generated Video Is a Wake-Up Call For How Easy It is For AI To Decieve People Right Now — GeekTyrant
Filmmaker Travis Bible created a short and crazy video using Google's Veo 3, not to flex AI skills, but to send a warning. Bible says: 'I made this video for my parents. And maybe yours too. The internet already had a truth problem. In the wrong hands, AI video generators could throw gas on the fire. …But what about your parents? Or your grandparents? 'So I made this video to warn my parents about AI scams (And to test out Veo 3 to see first hand how these programs are evolving).' The video shows how AI-generated footage can be convincing enough to fool even the most careful people, especially those less familiar with rapidly evolving tech. His experiment isn't a scare tactic, it's a heads-up. The tech is impressive, and If someone can make a fake video this convincing from their desktop, imagine what scammers will do. AI is only going to keep getting better and better. This is wild!