The House Appropriations Committee voted to strip funding for the federal WISeR pilot, pausing a program positioned to evaluate workforce and technology initiatives in health care. Lawmakers cited budget priorities and questioned the pilot’s scope; the move will halt planned demonstrations and close out contracts as the appropriations process continues.
Policy and industry stakeholders warn the funding cut could slow evidence generation around AI’s clinical utility, safety, and equity, delaying guidance for hospitals, vendors, and regulators. Researchers say losing federal support will constrain interoperability testing, data-sharing pilots, and workforce training critical to responsible AI adoption. Health systems and startups say the decision injects uncertainty into private investment and slows partnerships testing AI components in clinical workflows, while policymakers debate alternative evaluation approaches; the full House and appropriations negotiations will determine the program’s ultimate fate.




