NAACP Unveils Plan to Curb Racial Bias in U.S. Healthcare AI
The NAACP has released a comprehensive blueprint designed to ensure artificial intelligence (AI) in U.S. healthcare reduces, rather than reinforces, racial disparities. The 75-page report, Building a Healthier Future: Designing AI for Health Equity, calls for bias audits, transparency requirements, and “equity-first” standards as hospitals, technology firms and regulators increasingly adopt AI systems.
“The NAACP is calling for urgent action to embed fairness, transparency, and community engagement into every stage of health AI development,” the report said. Shared exclusively with Reuters, the document urges the creation of data governance councils, transparency reports and community-based partnerships to strengthen oversight and public trust.
The initiative forms part of the organisation’s year-long campaign to integrate equity principles into emerging healthcare technologies. The NAACP said it aims to close persistent health gaps affecting Black Americans by collaborating with hospitals, universities and technology companies to pilot fairness standards and develop community education tools.
Governance and Legislative Strategy
The report was developed in partnership with French pharmaceutical firm Sanofi and outlines a three-tier framework for AI governance. “What we mean by AI governance is developing principles and frameworks to ensure AI deployment is intentional, ethical and does not replicate historical disparities,” explained Dr. S. Craig Watkins, taskforce chair and professor at the University of Texas at Austin.
NAACP President Derrick Johnson said that given AI’s growing influence on health outcomes, communities must have a voice in shaping how data are used. “When you have such a powerful tool and you look at health outcomes and health access, we must be a part of the conversation to ensure that bad data isn’t leveraged to further disparities,” he said.
The NAACP is also coordinating with civil rights and healthcare advocacy groups to draft proposed legislation. Dr. Chris Pernell, director of the organisation’s Center for Health Equity, said the group will soon participate in a congressional briefing on AI’s use in rare disease research. “We are connecting more intentionally with Black legislators to show how regulatory frameworks can be ethically centred and equity focused,” she added.
Confronting Systemic Challenges
The NAACP’s push for health equity comes amid a broader rollback of diversity and inclusion programmes across U.S. institutions. Critics of race-conscious policies argue they discriminate against non-Black groups, while supporters say they are essential to tackling systemic inequities, including racial disparities in healthcare.
The report highlights examples of algorithmic bias, noting that AI models trained on incomplete datasets have misdiagnosed Black patients or recommended less aggressive treatments. It uses maternal mortality among Black women—who are three times more likely to die from pregnancy-related causes than white women, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention—as a case study of how inequities can worsen without safeguards.
Dr. Pernell emphasised that equity must underpin every stage of health innovation. “The drumbeat of the NAACP is that we must frame health equity as a human experience issue,” she said.
with inputs from Reuters

