Require health facilities using generative AI for patient communications to include disclaimers and contact instructions for human providers but exempt communications reviewed by a human health care provider from these requirements. Impose enforcement mechanisms for violations by health facilities, clinics, and physicians.
Analysis summaries, actor details, and coverage mappings were LLM-classified and may contain errors.
This is a binding California state statute with mandatory requirements, specific enforcement mechanisms, and designated regulatory authorities for violations.
The document has minimal coverage of approximately 3-4 subdomains, with focus on misinformation risks (3.1), human-computer interaction issues (5.1), and system safety concerns (7.3, 7.4). Coverage is concentrated on patient safety and transparency in healthcare AI communications.
The document exclusively governs the Health Care and Social Assistance sector, specifically regulating AI use in health facilities, clinics, and physician offices for patient communications. No other sectors are mentioned or governed.
The document primarily focuses on the Deploy and Operate and Monitor stages of the AI lifecycle, as it regulates how generative AI systems are deployed in patient communications and requires ongoing operational practices (disclaimers and human contact information). It does not address earlier stages like planning, data collection, or model building.
The document explicitly mentions and defines generative artificial intelligence and artificial intelligence more broadly. It does not mention frontier AI, general purpose AI, task-specific AI, foundation models, predictive AI, open-weight models, or compute thresholds.
California State Legislature; California Assembly
The document is California Assembly Bill 3030 (2024), indicating it was proposed by the California Assembly as part of the state legislative process.
Medical Board of California; Osteopathic Medical Board of California; health facility licensing authorities; clinic licensing authorities
The bill designates specific enforcement bodies for different types of violations: existing health facility and clinic enforcement mechanisms, and the Medical Board of California or Osteopathic Medical Board of California for physician violations.
Medical Board of California; Osteopathic Medical Board of California; health facility licensing authorities; clinic licensing authorities
The same bodies responsible for enforcement would also be responsible for monitoring compliance, as they have jurisdiction over licensed health facilities, clinics, and physicians under existing California health regulatory frameworks.
health facilities; clinics; physician's offices; offices of group practices
The bill explicitly targets health facilities, clinics, physician's offices, and offices of group practices that use generative AI for patient communications. These entities are deploying AI systems in healthcare settings.
4 subdomains (1 Good, 3 Minimal)