WHO Warns Europe’s AI Health Governance Gap Is Becoming Irreversible
Nearly two-thirds of countries in the WHO European Region are running AI diagnostics. One in 12 has written down how it will govern them.
Key Takeaways:
- Only 8% of countries have a health-specific AI strategy.
- Half of the region’s countries have introduced AI-powered patient chatbots.
- Just one in 12 countries has a strategy to govern AI implementations.
July 16, 2026 – 8:26 am
Image: World Health Organization
Hans Kluge, WHO Regional Director for Europe, began his speech in Lisbon with a stark statistic: "8%."
"That’s the share of countries in the WHO European Region that have a health-specific AI strategy," he stated.
Against this backdrop, nearly two-thirds of the region’s countries are deploying AI in diagnostics, and half have introduced AI-powered patient chatbots. Yet, only one in 12 has a strategy to govern any of it.
"That gap between deployment and governance is the defining challenge of AI in health right now," Kluge emphasized.
This gap persists despite the fact that 98% of member states identify improving patient care as the primary driver for adopting AI, with examples like Coimbra where AI-powered image analysis helps clinicians identify thoracic diseases and bone fractures faster.
Kluge’s Three Asks:
- Governance keeping pace with deployment: Every country deploying AI in health needs a strategy, liability standards, and workforce training.
- International coordination: Why WHO brought 37 countries from all six of its regions to Lisbon.
- A specific role for the Portuguese-speaking world.