Spend :01 of your time each Monday morning as Twelve:01 delivers timely tools, trends, strategies, and/or compliance insights for the CME/CE enterprise.
OpenAI Frontier is an emerging enterprise platform designed to build task-oriented AI agents that can reason across datasets and execute complex, multi-step workflows, with enterprise access now rolling out and rapid growth expected through 2026. For healthcare organizations, this signals a shift from isolated AI tools toward agent-based systems that can support activities such as clinical documentation, quality reporting, utilization review, and care coordination with minimal human handoffs. From a CME/CE perspective, these agents have the potential to personalize continuing education, automate needs assessments, and align learning content with real-time clinical performance gaps. Accredited CME/CE professionals should monitor this evolution closely, as AI agents are poised to reshape how education, quality improvement, and clinical operations intersects.
The Alliance for Continuing Education in the Health Professions (Alliance) will celebrate its 50th Conference on February 16–19, 2026, in Atlanta, Georgia, bringing together leaders and innovators across the CME/CE community. This milestone meeting will spotlight the future of accredited education, with a strong focus on technology, outcomes measurement, learner engagement, and the evolving role of education in improving patient care. Twelve:01 Consulting is excited to contribute to the program with two educational sessions: The 10-Point AI Governance & Capability Self-Check and Privacy by Design: Data Compliance Strategies for Accredited CE Programs, where our team will share real-world perspectives and actionable approaches. To those attending, we would love to connect with you – stop by our booth (#401) in the Exhibit Hall.
ECRI’s Top 10 Health Technology Hazards report is more than an annual watchlist, it’s a strategic roadmap healthcare leaders can actively use in 2026. Built on real-world incident data and nearly two decades of influence, the report prioritizes technology risks based on impact and preventability. AI-enabled hazards rise to the top. Used cross-functionally, the list helps break down silos between clinical, IT, engineering, and compliance teams to address shared risks. Organizations leaning into innovation should take a moment to consider this list, as an added measure of avoiding inadvertent harm because of the innovation.