
What You Should Know:
- Qventus released a new industry report surveying 60+ CIOs, Chief AI Officers, CMIOs, and other senior IT leadership from national health systems, including HonorHealth, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, and Rochester Regional Health to uncover how they are spending, evaluating, and regulating AI.
- The report, Beyond the Pilot: How CIOs Are Operationalizing AI Across Health Systems in 2026, confirms that the AI market is at a pressure point. As EHR giants expand into AI, many health systems are finding that their solutions are causing more friction than support for health systems, leading to the shift toward more third-party platforms.
CIO Report Revealing How Health Systems Are Closing the Gap Between AI Pilots and Payoff
Today’s average hospital margins reached a precarious 2.1% at the end of 2024. Simultaneously, the industry is bracing for nearly $1 trillion in federal spending cuts to Medicaid and the Affordable Care Act initiated by the 2025 One Big Beautiful Bill.
To survive this financial squeeze, hospital CIOs have aggressively turned to artificial intelligence, tripling their AI spending to $1.4 billion last year. Yet, according to a sweeping new 2026 report from Qventus, the vast majority of health systems are stuck. They are trapped in pilot purgatory, unable to turn their expensive AI experiments into actual operational ROI.
“The decisions we’re making about AI right now are among the most consequential we’ve faced — and the margin for error is razor thin,” noted Jim Whitfill, MD, SVP and Chief Transformation Officer at HonorHealth.
The Qventus data reveals that while 42% of health systems are actively deploying AI across multiple use cases, a staggering 4% have actually achieved scaled implementation with measurable outcomes.
The End of the EHR Waiting Game
To understand why so many hospitals are failing to scale their AI, you have to look at the traditional healthcare IT playbook. Historically, when a hospital wanted new software, the CIO’s instinct was to simply wait for their massive Electronic Health Record (EHR) vendor (like Epic or Oracle Health) to build it.
But in the age of generative and agentic AI, that patience has evaporated.
According to the report, 74% of technology leaders now cite dependence on their EHR vendor’s AI roadmap as a top obstacle to executing their strategy. The shift in sentiment is violent: in 2025, 52% of respondents said they would wait 18 months for an EHR feature rather than buy a third-party tool. Today, only 22% are willing to wait.
“I think that the cost of waiting for Epic or Oracle, or any of them, is you might lose out,” warned Matthew Anderson, MD, CMIO at HonorHealth. “There’s a late-mover disadvantage”.
The Platform Mandate
While CIOs are tired of waiting for legacy EHRs, they are equally exhausted by the alternative: a fragmented mess of third-party AI startups.
Over 50% of health systems report spending up to a quarter of their IT bandwidth simply managing vendors and integrations. Because of this severe IT strain, 72% of technology leaders said they would prefer to work with a single comprehensive AI partner that manages multiple end-to-end use cases. Yet, only 11% have managed to achieve that consolidated approach today.
This data presents a massive mandate for health-tech vendors in 2026. Hospital executives do not want to buy ten different “point solutions” to fix ten different operational bottlenecks. They want a single, enterprise-grade orchestration platform that guarantees shared risk and hard ROI.
With 94% of CIOs explicitly stating that AI delays will put their organization at a competitive disadvantage, the “wait and see” era is officially dead. The hospitals that thrive over the next decade will be the ones that consolidate their vendors, bypass the sluggish EHR roadmaps, and treat AI as core operational infrastructure rather than a science experiment.For more information about the Qventus report, click here.
