Philips: AI Saves Clinicians 132 Hours Annually, According to Its 2026 Index
This Tuesday, the Dutch health technology giant releases its annual 2026 index showing that artificial intelligence is already generating measurable productivity gains in healthcare facilities. However, hospital systems face infrastructure and training deficits that threaten to widen adoption gaps.
Significant Time Savings for Clinicians
According to Philips' Future Health Index 2026 (based on a panel of more than 2,000 health professionals and 20,000 patients across 10 countries), 46% of clinicians report time savings of at least 132 annual hours on average, equivalent to more than three full work weeks. More broadly, AI saves practitioners the equivalent of 16 work days per year. Half of the clinicians surveyed state that this relief allows them to increase their treatment capacity, with an average of eight additional patients seen each week. Beyond the hourly gain, the report emphasizes that this freed-up time is reinvested in higher-value clinical tasks and patient relationships. 65% of professionals also report greater confidence in their decision-making, while 49% mention a reduction in work-related stress.
39% of Clinicians Observe Medical Error Prevention
The report indicates that 39% of clinicians have observed at least three instances in the past three months where AI has identified or helped prevent potential medical errors. This detection capability is part of a broader transformation of workflows: by automating repetitive tasks, AI reduces the cognitive and emotional burden on practitioners, thereby freeing up mental space for clinical quality and patient safety. Ami Bhatt, Chief Innovation Officer of the American College of Cardiology, quoted in the report, notes that 'clinicians are beginning to experience AI not as an abstract technology, but as something that significantly changes clinical safety.'
Training and Infrastructure: Major Barriers to Widespread Adoption
Despite these positive outcomes, the study reveals major divergences in organizational maturity. 70% of clinicians consider their AI training to be inadequate, inconsistent, or nonexistent. Identified needs include verifying the accuracy of AI recommendations, acquiring technical navigation skills, and understanding legal responsibilities. Concurrently, 59% of clinicians believe that the leadership of their establishment is taking the right steps to implement AI. However, fragmented IT environments and a lack of interoperability make the consistent deployment of AI across teams and care sites complex. Shez Partovi, Chief Innovation Officer of Philips, concludes that 'health systems are still at the beginning of their AI journey, and there is real work to be done on infrastructure and training.'