
AI is poised to replace administrative and documentation-heavy healthcare jobs while creating new data and AI-focused roles, with most patient-facing and complex clinical positions remaining secure.
Key Details
- 1AI is unlikely to displace many patient-facing clinical roles, such as nurses, surgeons, and emergency medicine physicians.
- 2Jobs most at risk include scribe, coder, appointment scheduler, front-desk receptionist, insurance verifier, and pharmacy technician.
- 3Key factors influencing AI-driven job changes will be regulatory frameworks, liability laws, and public trust—not just technology.
- 4Emerging roles include clinical AI implementation specialist (average salary $70K–$100K), healthcare AI ethics/governance analyst (average salary $141K), and health AI data scientist (average salary $122K).
- 5Cultivating AI literacy is recommended for current healthcare professionals to remain relevant.
Why It Matters
Understanding which healthcare jobs are most susceptible to AI automation and which new positions are arising is crucial for practitioners, radiology departments, and AI professionals as they navigate workforce changes and future-proof their skills.

Source
HealthExec
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