AI use among nurses nearly tripled in a year

NEW YORK, UNITED STATES — Artificial intelligence (AI) adoption among United States nurses has nearly tripled in a single year — but hospitals have not kept pace. A new report from Yahoo Finance finds most frontline nurses are turning to AI tools with little employer guidance, leaving significant productivity gains unrealized.
Nurse AI adoption surges to 44%
Incredible Health’s 7th Annual State of Nursing Report, published in July 2026, surveyed 2,240 U.S. nurses and technicians drawn from the company’s marketplace of 1.5 million healthcare workers. It found that 44% of nurses now use AI regularly, up from approximately 15% the prior year — nearly a threefold increase.
Adoption runs sharper among younger nurses: 60% of those under 28 used AI in their job searches, compared to 39% across all respondents. By contrast, only 4% of healthcare employers currently use AI in interviewing or hiring — a gap that signals how unevenly the technology is spreading across the industry.
The generational divide indicates AI has become a baseline expectation for nurses entering the workforce, even as most health systems are still deciding whether to deploy it at all. The report draws on proprietary data from Incredible Health’s marketplace, giving it unusually broad reach for a nursing workforce survey.
Training gap undermines nurse AI productivity
Adoption speed has not translated into productivity gains — and the evidence points to a training deficit. Among nurses using AI with formal training, 24% saved more than one hour daily. Among those using AI without training, only 16% achieved the same result. Nearly half of all AI-using nurses reported saving little or no time.
“AI is one of the most powerful technologies of our era…Yet in healthcare, almost half of workers using AI report almost zero ROI,” said Dr. Iman Abuzeid, CEO and Co-founder of Incredible Health.
Only 8% of nurses said their employer clearly communicated an AI strategy for their role — and just 8% of frontline workers were included when employers selected which AI tools to deploy.
Among non-users, 38% believe AI will negatively impact the healthcare workforce, compared to just 16% of regular AI users. Experience, the data suggests, changes the perception.
For healthcare outsourcing providers, the Incredible Health findings map directly onto documented gaps in clinical support operations. Offshore teams handling clinical documentation and care coordination are increasingly adjacent to AI tool rollouts — and face the same training deficit that limits ROI for bedside nurses.
Outsourcing partners with structured AI enablement programs and experienced clinical documentation specialists offer health systems a path to extracting measurable productivity from their AI investments.
As nurse adoption continues to accelerate, the operational infrastructure behind effective deployment becomes the differentiating factor.

Independent




