Meetings and compliance management software provider Groupize has launched an artificial intelligence-powered mechanism for life sciences clients that require health care providers to sign in, get validated and have event spending levels tracked and reported via Concur for transparency and compliance with the U.S. Physician Payments Sunshine Act.
The Sunshine Act, enacted in 2010 as part of the Affordable Care Act, requires event data in accordance with the Open Payments database, which makes publicly accessible any value exchanges to physicians and other HCPs—including event fees, dinners, transportation coverage or other value transfers.
Groupize’s new digital sign-in with artificial intelligence—or, Dsai—add-on to its standard Digital Sign In offering targets life sciences companies with an HCP sign in process that captures and identifies signatures with AI-powered optical character recognition then automates the HCP license validation, pushes spend data to Concur for real-time reporting and then scores the data for completeness against Open Payments requirements.
The process via Groupize, a tech provider that has built its value proposition on enabling companies to decentralize complex event planning and management, pushes digital sign-in capability to all relevant users. Groupize CCO Charles de Gaspe Beaubien in a statement said the AI-powered process enables such users to “seamlessly adopt a compliant, digital-first approach with minimal effort.”