According to a recent LinkedIn post from Qualified Health, the company is partnering with the Digital Medicine Society (DiMe) to address governance and accountability for AI tools in healthcare. The post references a joint article by DiMe CEO Jennifer Goldsack and Qualified Health CEO Justin Norden arguing that the healthcare sector is building an AI economy without a robust accountability layer.
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The post situates this initiative in the context of the U.S. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) ACCESS Model, which has accepted more than 150 organizations and relies on AI-enabled care models operating reliably at scale. It suggests that DiMe contributes shared standards for clinical evidence, usability, and performance, while Qualified Health operates inside health systems where AI tools are evaluated, deployed, and monitored in real-world conditions.
Qualified Health’s LinkedIn post indicates that the partnership aims to connect those standards with practical governance workflows that health systems can implement. For investors, this may signal a strategic focus on becoming an infrastructure player in AI governance, potentially positioning the company as a key intermediary between standards bodies and health system operators.
If successful, this role could create recurring, system-level revenue opportunities as demand for compliant and reliable AI grows under value-based care and CMS-led models. The collaboration with DiMe could also enhance Qualified Health’s credibility with regulators, payors, and large provider organizations, potentially improving its competitive standing in the digital health and AI oversight segment.

