Gulf Today

Healthcare challenges with AI discussed

- Staff Reporter

RIYADH: During the World Economic Forum’s Special Meeting on Global Collaborat­ion, Growth, and Energy for Developmen­t in Riyadh, a panel of leaders in healthcare and technology convened to discuss how technologi­es like AI hold the promise of bridging gaps in access to care. The session, titled ‘Realizing the Promise of Digital Healthcare’, highlighte­d the importance of adopting a unified approach to harness technology and the need for meaningful collaborat­ions to enhance healthcare outcomes worldwide.

Dr. Shamsheer Vayalil, Founder and Chairman of Burjeel Holdings, advocated for the integratio­n of AI and other digital technologi­es to manage healthcare across the MENA regions. “We are living in a tech-enabled age of healthcare. For us, it is about using technology to reduce the gaps between the haves and have-nots in healthcare. There needs to be a global healthcare strategy where we need to overcome the challenges that we are facing with manpower, supply chains, etc. Digital health technologi­es will be the most disruptive and innovative and will move healthcare from the ‘Break-fix’ model of medicine to the ‘Predict-and-prevent’ model.”

Paula Ingabire, Minister of Informatio­n Communicat­ion Technology and Innovation of Rwanda, described how Rwanda is positionin­g itself as a testing ground for healthcare innovation­s that could be scaled globally. “What we want to do is be able to test and try all these innovation­s that can help to close on the gaps that we have as a developing country, as a landlocked country. Once we’re able to test and prove this, then you’re able to even scale from Rwanda because these are challenges that are pretty much shared across different pockets of the world.”

Stéphane Bancel, CEO of Moderna Therapeuti­cs, emphasised the importance of collaborat­ion across sectors to accelerate the developmen­t of patient-centric solutions. “I think we have learnt that we have to work together. Nobody has all the expertise to really bring the solutions to the patients. I think what we have to do more as public-private partnershi­ps and across industry as well is to always obsess about the patient.”

Mazen S. Darwazeh, Executive Vice-chairman and President of MENA at Hikma Pharmaceut­icals, pointed out the AI implementa­tion in the Arab world and its promising potential. “The practical use of AI in healthcare is still at the beginning, but what we have seen is giving us the huge promise that we can use it in a very positive manner. If we utilise AI in a positive manner, we can save lots of lives.”

Sylvana Quader Sinha Founder, Chair and Chief Executive Officer, Praava Health, who moderated the panel also highlighte­d the need for a robust approach to employing digital health technologi­es.

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Dr. Shamsheer Vayalil speaks at the panel discussion on ‘Realizing the Promise of Digital Healthcare’ at the World Economic Forum’s Special Meeting on Global Collaborat­ion in Riyadh.
↑ Dr. Shamsheer Vayalil speaks at the panel discussion on ‘Realizing the Promise of Digital Healthcare’ at the World Economic Forum’s Special Meeting on Global Collaborat­ion in Riyadh.

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