AI is learning to act. EDENA makes sure it acts under human authority.
A nurse-led governance framework for agentic AI — classifying risk, gating consequential action, preserving accountable judgment, and creating auditable evidence before AI reaches patients, systems, or the public.
The EDENA Runtime Contract
AI proposes
The agent generates options, drafts, recommendations, and candidate actions.
EDENA classifies & gates
Each candidate action is tiered by risk, reversibility, and blast radius — then allowed, reviewed, escalated, or blocked.
A named human confirms
Accountable authority routes to the right clinician or steward. The loop never closes on a tier.
Nurses steward
Whole-person, systems-aware judgment governs the environment in which AI acts.
Evidence persists
The decision path is logged. Learning updates governance.
AI proposes. EDENA gates. Humans decide. Nurses steward.
The first phase of AI was about outputs. The next phase is about actions.
Modern AI systems no longer just answer. They use tools, manage state, execute workflows, hand off tasks between agents, and operate across applications. Most organizations still govern this like software — not like delegated autonomy.
The problem
AI can now draft, route, summarize, code, retrieve, monitor, coordinate agents, and affect real systems. Capability has outrun governance.
The risk
Without runtime governance, AI creates speed without oversight, automation without accountability, and intelligence without judgment.
The answer
EDENA gives institutions a practical way to decide when AI may assist, when it must be reviewed, when it must escalate, and when it must stop.
The safety, ethics, and accountability layer that governs how AI moves from suggestion to action.
EDENA — the Ethical Decision Engine for Nurse-led AI — is not a chatbot, a diagnosis model, an ethics committee, or a passive dashboard. It is a decision architecture: a policy-and-risk execution layer for governed autonomy.
It evaluates candidate AI actions before they execute — checking context, data sensitivity, reversibility, autonomy, and blast radius — routes the required human review, logs the decision path, and activates containment when a system exceeds its authorized scope.
Risk is not a label. It is a property of what is about to happen.
EDENA tiers both the action (what an AI is about to do) and the capability (what class of system you are deploying). The posture rises with reversibility, externality, autonomy, and human consequence.
Green
Low-risk, bounded, reversible, informational capability or action.
Yellow
Clinically or operationally relevant; powerful but understandable; changes workflows.
Orange
Emergent systemic risk from agents, autonomy, memory, scale, or coordination. Not yet catastrophic — no longer ordinary.
Red
High-risk, irreversible, or challenging human oversight, safety, and institutional control.
The world's governance bodies are arriving at EDENA's architecture.
Across 2025–2026, every major authority independently converged on the same mandate: classify by risk, gate at runtime, require named human accountability, and maintain auditable evidence. EDENA is the nurse-led implementation standard for that converging mandate.
One doctrine, across every surface where AI can act.
EDENA starts in healthcare — the highest-trust, highest-liability, highest-consequence environment — and extends to every system where intelligence meets action.
Clinical action-gating
Documentation, handoffs, sepsis alerts, medication workflows, prior authorization, discharge, patient education — each tiered and gated.
Clinical use cases EDENA-ASAgentic software
Capability boundaries, tiering, kill switches, registered owners, and escalation paths — answering OWASP's Agentic Top 10. No orphaned agents.
Agentic Systems Standard EDENA-RSRobotics & cyber-physical
The doctrine extended to AI that moves through the physical world: robots act within bounds, humans hold authority, nurses steward the whole.
Robotic Systems StandardEDENA is not AI ethics as a statement. It is AI ethics as an operating system.
Twelve principles form the backbone of the framework — each one operational, each one anchored in regulation, clinical evidence, and nursing ethics.
All twelve principles- 01Human judgment is non-transferable.
- 02Tier the interaction, gate the action.
- 04Reversibility determines risk.
- 06The loop closes on a named human.
- 08Meaningful oversight must be protected.
- 12Nurses steward the whole environment.
Where AI scales intelligence, EDENA scales stewardship.
Begin with a readiness assessment and an AI action inventory. Tier your interactions, design your human-oversight posture, and stand up the evidence your auditors and regulators now require.