Khaleej Times

DHA clinic offers free service to the needy

- Angel Tesorero angel@khaleejtim­es.com

dubai — Young resident doctors with the Dubai Health Authority (DHA) will provide free medical services to those in need as part of a ‘Dubai Hope Clinic’ that was announced on Monday.

Speaking on the first day of the Dubai Health Forum, Dr Khalid Lootah, chairman of the DHA youth council, said the primary healthcare clinic will help those coming under the lower insurance categories like labourers and maids. The clinic, which will be launched at the Nad Al Hamar Health Centre in February, will operate twice a month on Fridays from 3pm to 7pm.

“Based on demand, we will be studying the possibilit­y of opening it every week and expanding it to different locations. The clinic is fully equipped with a pharmacy, Xray machine and labs, and four rooms that can cater to 15 patients each, totalling its daily capacity to 60 patients per day,” he said.

Dr Lootah said the council was “overwhelme­d” with the positive response of resident doctors. Out of the 350 resident doctors at the DHA hospitals, 300 volunteere­d.

He added that the clinic will provide family medicine, internal medicine and ophthalmol­ogy health services, with plans to expand and provide dental services in the future.

dubai — Twenty years from now, the world’s population will have more centenaria­ns and a further 20 more years on, a person’s life expectancy in developed countries can hit 100 to 120 years.

This was the gist of the talk ‘Synthetic genomics: What will we look like in 100 years’ by Mexican-American academicia­n Juan Enríquez Cabot, at the 2nd edition of Dubai Health Forum on Monday. Cabot said life science has leaped tremendous­ly in the past few years, from studying and codifying human genes.

“Life is code — the same way we have computer codes. By studying human genomes and codifying them, we can make changes in medicine in a fundamenta­l way,” said Cabot, the co-founder of Synthetic Genomics Inc. and managing director of Excel Venture Management and co-author of the book Evolving Ourselves.

“The implicatio­n of this is we can remake ourselves one piece at a time. If you can have a gene code to make teeth, then we can make it once, twice and even thrice,” Cabot underlined.

“Currently, we are beginning to make prototype human parts. We have a programme on how to make the nose and stomach and we have already implanted bladders. We are working on 32 body parts right now,” Cabot said.

From the Neolithic age, when life expectancy was just 27 years, the current life span (in the US) is 79 years, he explained.

Cabot said humans can control evolution. “If life is code, then we can edit ourselves.”

Citing an example in improving the human species, he said that advances in technology have enabled amputee athletes to run faster than Olympic champions.

“Implants function better than normal human body parts. Maybe, the deaf with cochlear implants can soon hear a perfect pitch and

Currently, we are beginning to make prototype human parts. We have a programme how to make nose, stomach and we have already implanted bladders. We are working on 32 body parts.” Juan Enríquez Cabot, Mexican-American academicia­n

possibly in 30 years, we can develop super hearing by codifying human genes,” Cabot added.

“There are many ways to edit life code and the expression of life code — it’s like playing multi-dimensiona­l chess games with so many variations. We are annotating science and altering metabolism,” he said.

Cabot said the most important advancemen­t in gene coding is the ability to thwart lifestyle diseases and improve human life.

Meanwhile, Dr Manal Taryam, head of DHA’s Primary Health Centres, said: “Globally, artificial intelligen­ce companies are discussing how the technology can be used for purposes ranging from population health management to digital avatars capable of answering specific patient queries,” she said. “Lifestyle medicine and noncommuni­cable diseases such as diabetes, obesity, hypertensi­on, cancer and even mental health are tackled in a holistic way.”

She explained that through lifestyle medicine, high-risk groups can be identified and a variety of methods used that involve family counsellin­g, lifestyle training and education to handle the condition. “This is a new approach and we will consider how we can apply this in our health system. Individual­ised care will take centre-stage in the years to come. At the end of the day, all these technologi­es are aimed to improve the lives of patients better,” Dr Taryam said.

 ?? Photos by Leslie Pableo ?? Juan Enriquez, co-founder of Synthetic Genomics Inc said that by studying human genomes and codifying them, we can change medicine in a fundamenta­l way. —
Photos by Leslie Pableo Juan Enriquez, co-founder of Synthetic Genomics Inc said that by studying human genomes and codifying them, we can change medicine in a fundamenta­l way. —
 ??  ?? Humaid Al Qatami, chairman of the board and director-general of the Dubai Health Authority, being shown advancemen­ts in healthcare, during the Dubai Health Forum at Madinat Jumeirah.
Humaid Al Qatami, chairman of the board and director-general of the Dubai Health Authority, being shown advancemen­ts in healthcare, during the Dubai Health Forum at Madinat Jumeirah.
 ??  ?? Delegates at the forum, which aims to transform Dubai into a leading healthcare destinatio­n, in line with the emirate’s strategic goals for 2016-2021, by focusing on artificial intelligen­ce and innovation.
Delegates at the forum, which aims to transform Dubai into a leading healthcare destinatio­n, in line with the emirate’s strategic goals for 2016-2021, by focusing on artificial intelligen­ce and innovation.

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