For decades, cameras in hospital corridors were a valuable tool for capturing forensic evidence, though they were not yet the proactive security asset we see today. That model is changing rapidly, and the shift is significant.
AI-powered analytics transform cameras and sensors from passive recorders into active operational intelligence systems. The result is a new layer of insight across patient safety, clinical efficiency, and business operations. But giving hospitals more than just eyes – giving them a brain – requires more than deploying the right technology. It demands a reevaluation of how these systems fit into the healthcare environment and how to bring patients and staff along.
Two lanes of transformation
AI-powered cameras are making an impact on healthcare within two distinct lanes. The first is traditional security and public safety. The second, and perhaps more exciting, is clinical and operational. Here, the technology is starting to function less like a security tool and more like a team member.
On the security side, one of the most meaningful advancements is acoustic analytics. These audio systems act as an electronic ear, detecting aggressive voices, gunshots, or breaking glass. When the system detects a potential event, the control center receives an alert and can pull the relevant camera feed in real time. At a time when more than half of nurses reported experiencing verbal threats or aggressive language at work in the past year, this technology can reduce workplace violence. Faster response times enabled by audio analytics can prevent incidents from escalating into physical violence.
Body-worn cameras are also seeing rapid adoption, and not just for security personnel: nurses are beginning to wear them, too. These devices allow dispatchers to obtain a live view of potential security incidents, enabling faster, more informed decisions. They can determine how many responders to send, whether a supervisor is needed, and how serious the situation is. There’s also a de-escalation dimension: when someone knows they’re being recorded, behavior often shifts.
This leads nicely into the clinical and operational side, where capabilities like fall detection have seen major improvements. With between 700,000 and one million patient falls occurring in U.S. hospitals each year, the stakes are substantial. AI models built for fall detection, particularly through deep learning, are becoming more accurate and reliable. They can distinguish between a patient moving in their bed and an actual fall. They recognize when a nurse enters and exits a room without triggering any unnecessary alarms. The “boy who cried wolf” problem that plagued early analytics – where false alarms were so common that staff simply turned systems off – is being resolved through better modeling.
When technology proves unreliable, people stop trusting it. When it proves reliable, it becomes indispensable.
The privacy conversation can’t be an afterthought
AI-powered cameras in healthcare inevitably raise questions about patient privacy. This is a legitimate concern, and the industry is right to take it seriously. The good news is that thoughtful privacy design has become a built-in expectation, not an afterthought.
Technology providers already use several practical approaches. Privacy masking tools render individuals visually unidentifiable while still enabling analytics to function – presenting the human form as a colored silhouette, a pixelated shape, or resembling a pencil sketch. Patient rooms can also include controls to switch cameras off when privacy is needed. Additionally, any footage captured in clinical areas is treated as a patient’s record and is subject to the same HIPAA protections as other health information.
This last point is particularly important for healthcare leaders thinking about deployment. The standard isn’t just about what’s technically permissible; it’s about what earns patient trust. The question isn’t only “can we record this?” but also “how would patients feel if they knew it was being recorded, and would they understand why?”
Transparency is the foundation of trust. Organizations that proactively communicate when, where, and why cameras are used – and what protections are in place – face far less resistance. Organizations should position these systems as tools designed to protect patients and staff and improve the care experience, not just as security.
A strong foundation makes all the difference
The biggest pitfall in hospital technology deployment isn’t choosing the wrong product. It’s failing to think through the full operational picture before taking action. Before any purchase decision, healthcare leaders should run every initiative through three filters: people, process, and technology – in that order.
“People” means asking who will use this system, what their day looks like, and whether you have the staff to act on what the technology tells you. A weapon screening system at an emergency room entrance sounds valuable in theory. But if your implementation requires four full-time equivalents to staff that entrance around the clock (and you’re already short-staffed), you’ve created a gap that makes the technology more of a liability than an asset.
“Process” means setting the right policies and procedures before you go live. What happens when an alert is triggered? Who’s responsible? How is the footage handled, stored, and protected? Is there a schedule to maintain and check the systems? The value of any system depends on its reliability.
“Technology” comes last. Not because it’s least important, but because the right choice only becomes clear once you understand the first two. For example, the Covid-era rush to deploy thermal cameras for temperature screening is a cautionary tale still visible in hospitals today, where those cameras now sit unused. While thermal cameras remain valuable for detecting surface temperature variations, they cannot reliably identify infections through temperature screening alone. The pressure to do something led to expensive purchases without a sound operational foundation, and many organizations were left with systems that fell short of expectations.
IT teams need to be in the room from the very beginning. Bandwidth, infrastructure, and integration with existing systems like electronic health records are requirements that must be addressed before any purchase decision is made. Getting IT, security, and clinical teams aligned early is the most important step a hospital can take before deployment.
What’s coming next
Looking further ahead, the most transformative use of AI-powered cameras in healthcare may not be in security at all, but rather business intelligence.
The metadata captured by modern camera systems is rich. Patient flow, equipment utilization, queue lengths, and inventory management give administrators an operational picture that didn’t exist before. For example, when a surge overwhelms the registration desk, an alert can prompt immediate staff redeployment. Over time, that same data shapes smarter decisions about staffing, space, and resource allocation.
The trajectory is clear: cameras and sensors are becoming the nervous system of healthcare operations, shifting from reactive tools to proactive, data-driven assets. Hospitals that embrace this evolution thoughtfully – with a clear focus on people, processes, and technology – will fully realize its potential.
We are in the next industrial revolution. AI, deep learning, and the metadata collected by intelligent sensors are changing how industries operate at a fundamental level, and healthcare is no exception. Hospitals are moving beyond simply having “eyes” on their environments, to building systems that function more like a brain: interpreting data, identifying patterns, and enabling faster, more informed decisions. The opportunity is significant, and so is the responsibility to get it right.
Photo: Vithun Khamsong, Getty Images
Paul Baratta is the Business Development Manager for Healthcare for Axis Communications, Inc. In this capacity he is responsible for developing strategies and building channel relationships to expand Axis’ presence in healthcare markets. Mr. Baratta has over three decades of experience building market share in the healthcare space having risen to executive positions at GE Security as well as Niscayah and Stanley Security where he was a four time recipient of the Presidents Club. In addition, he served as Chief of Police for Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center overseeing police, security and emergency management. Mr. Baratta is an active member of many healthcare associations. He is the Chair of the Healthcare Working Group for SIA, a member of the ASIS Healthcare Advisory Boards, and serves on the Membership Board of IAHSS.
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