The Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) from the UK has established an AI commission so as to help speed up the adoption of technology across the National Health Service (NHS).
It will be Alastair Denniston, University of Birmingham’s professor of regulatory science and innovation, who is going to chair the UK National Commission on the Regulation of AI in Healthcare and would include experts from big technology companies like Microsoft as well as Google.
The commission will offer guidance when it comes to producing a revised regulatory framework in terms of AI’s use in healthcare, working with the MHRA, which is going to be due for publication in 2026.
Stressing how the access to the latest AI technology can get safely accelerated, a major focus of the framework is going to be to offer regulatory clarity on the usage of AI tools across areas that include the likes of radiology, pathology, and remote monitoring systems, which, by the way, is a major factor that, as per the MHRA, is at present holding the technology back.
The commission is also going to assess how to speed up the access to ambient voice technology for doctors, which happens to be an AI tool that enables notetaking at the time of patient consultations. The fact is that such technology has possibly reduced the administrative burden on GPs, and at the same time, it resonates with a key intent of the 10-year plan of the UK government for the NHS so as to cut the wait list.
Earlier in September 2025, Microsoft deployed its Dragon Copilot AI rollout in the NHS after a very successful 6-month pilot phase.
Offering a regulatory clarity for new AI tools is going to make the UK a very attractive destination when it comes to tech investment, as per the MHRA, therefore supporting the 10-year plan by the government to build an NHS that is completely fit for the future.
The CEO of MHRA, Lawrence Tallon, remarked that by bringing together the leading voices in healthcare, technology, and patient safety, this commission is indeed going to help establish the UK as a worldwide leader when it comes to responsible AI healthcare regulation.
He added that the MHRA is surely going to act on the recommendations of the commission in order to support the digital transformation and AI rollout in the NHS and, at the same time, advance the ambition of the UK to become a major worldwide hub when it comes to healthtech investment.
The UK government went on to reveal its plans pertaining to a £29bn funding push for the NHS in June 2025, therefore reflecting a 3% yearly rise on the present levels for the next three years in order to reach £226bn by 2029, so as to meet the objectives of its Plan For Change initiative when it comes to the health service.
It is well to be noted that almost £10bn of the complete funding is set to raise the technology budget of the NHS by around 50% so as to convert the so-called analogue health system into digital.