June 14, 2026

AI Literacy for UAE Pharmacists: The 2026 Regulatory Picture (DoH, EDE, SFDA)

Quick answerIn the UAE, AI competence is moving from “nice to have” toward an expected part of pharmacy practice. There is no single law called an “AI-literacy mandate,” but several instruments point the same way: Abu Dhabi’s Department of Health (DoH) issued the region’s first emirate-level AI governance policy and added a Responsible AI Standard in 2025[2]; the Emirates Drug Establishment (EDE) took over 44 federal regulatory services from MOHAP effective end of 2025[1]; and AI is being woven into professional licensure.[2] The practical response for a pharmacist: use AI responsibly, verify everything, and work inside a recognised governance framework (NIST AI RMF[4] / ISO/IEC 42001[5]).

By Nurvia Health — Academy · Last updated June 2026 · Educational summary, not legal advice · 7 min read

What actually changed (and what didn’t)

It’s worth being precise, because the headlines blur together. Here is what is documented:

  • EDE consolidation. The Emirates Drug Establishment assumed 44 core regulatory services from the Ministry of Health and Prevention — marketing authorisations, import/export permits, GMP certification, facility licensing — effective end of 2025.[1]
  • DoH AI policy. Abu Dhabi’s DoH published its Policy on the Use of AI in the Healthcare Sector — the first emirate-level AI governance framework in the region — and introduced a Responsible AI Standard in 2025 with updated technical, data-privacy, transparency and explainability conditions for healthcare AI.[2]
  • AI in licensure. The DoH is aligning licensure with the UAE’s national AI strategy, including a move toward computer-adaptive testing and building AI competency into the professional qualification framework.[2]
  • Regulators using AI themselves. Saudi Arabia’s SFDA launched RASID — an AI service that verifies controlled medications carried by travellers, supporting 50+ languages — an example of AI moving into front-line drug regulation.[6]

What there is not (yet) is a single, separately-named “AI-literacy certificate” every pharmacist must hold. The direction is clear; the exact mechanism continues to evolve. Treat AI competence as an expected professional standard and confirm specifics with your licensing authority.

The 2026 GCC regulatory map for pharmacists

Body Level Relevance to AI in pharmacy
EDE UAE federal Drug/device registration, licensing, GMP — 44 services from MOHAP (end-2025)[1]
DoH (Abu Dhabi) Emirate AI policy + Responsible AI Standard (2025); AI in licensure[2]
DHA (Dubai) Emirate Licensure and quality environment incorporating digital/AI
SFDA (KSA) National Drug regulation; RASID AI service for controlled-medication checks[6]
ISO/IEC 42001 · NIST AI RMF Global backbone AI management & risk frameworks regulators reference[4][5]

What responsible AI use looks like for a pharmacist

  1. Use AI appropriately for clinical, operational, and patient-facing tasks.
  2. Verify output before acting — never treat a model’s answer as authoritative on its own.
  3. Understand the limits — hallucination, bias, data privacy, and where AI must not make the final call.
  4. Operate within governance — keep audit trails, respect patient-data rules, stay inside a defined framework.
  5. Stay accountable — the pharmacist, not the AI, owns every clinical decision.

Why this is an opportunity, not just a burden

Two pharmacists apply for the same senior role. One says “I use ChatGPT sometimes.” The other shows a governance self-audit, a redesigned workflow with measured results, and a portfolio case study built inside the exact frameworks regulators reference. The shift toward AI competence didn’t hold the second pharmacist back — it handed them a way to stand out.

Frequently asked questions

Is there a single “DoH AI-literacy mandate” I must comply with?

Not as one named rule. AI competence is being built into UAE healthcare practice through several instruments — the DoH AI policy and 2025 Responsible AI Standard, EDE consolidation, and AI in licensure.[2] Confirm specifics with your licensing authority.

What frameworks should a UAE pharmacy follow?

ISO/IEC 42001 (2023) and NIST AI RMF (2023) as the global backbone, mapped to local requirements like the DoH AI policy and Abu Dhabi Responsible AI Standard.[4][5][2]

What is SFDA RASID?

RASID is an AI service from Saudi Arabia’s SFDA that verifies controlled medications carried by travellers in 50+ languages — not a general pharmacy-licensing system.[6]

Benchmark yourself first

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References

  1. Ministry of Health and Prevention (UAE), transfer of key services to the Emirates Drug Establishment (44 services, effective end-2025). mohap.gov.ae; Arabian Business.
  2. International Bar Association, “How is AI in healthcare being regulated in the UAE?” (DoH AI policy, 2025 Responsible AI Standard, AI in licensure). ibanet.org.
  3. NIST, “AI Risk Management Framework (AI RMF 1.0),” 2023. nist.gov.
  4. ISO/IEC 42001:2023, “Artificial intelligence — Management system.” iso.org.
  5. Saudi Food and Drug Authority, “RASID smart service for verifying controlled medications.” sfda.gov.sa; GCC Business News.

This article is educational and does not constitute legal or regulatory advice. Regulations evolve — always confirm current requirements directly with the EDE, DoH, DHA, or SFDA.



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