The National - News

True healthcare innovation is behind the scenes

▶ Futuristic inventions can’t be the entire basis for a durable healthcare system

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The very latest innovation­s in healthcare were on show at the Dubai Health Forum this week. The event was designed to encourage the kind of ideas-sharing that will characteri­se the UAE’s future knowledge economy. It is also part of a concerted effort to market the country as a global healthcare hub, attracting patients – or medical tourists – from the wider region and beyond. Early indication­s suggest the forum will strengthen both objectives. On show yesterday were innovation­s in 3D printing, robotics, artificial intelligen­ce, blockchain and telemedici­ne. The forum builds on a legacy of strong national interest in healthcare. There is, though, an acceptance that healthcare must be improved in the UAE, and the Dubai Health Forum is a step forward.

Neverthele­ss, an over-reliance on futuristic healthcare innovation­s would be reductive. The US$500 Flow Neuroscien­ce device presented at the forum, for instance, claims to reduce the symptoms of depression by 35 per cent by sending a low electric current into the brain. Such solutions should be part of a broader infrastruc­ture of facilities, clinics and medical profession­als. There is no single prescripti­on that can be written to develop a better healthcare system. Dubai, known for embracing the latest technologi­cal innovation­s, was the ideal location for the forum. But it is developmen­ts behind the scenes, rather than high-tech inventions, that bolster healthcare provision. A strong regulatory framework ensures this country will avoid becoming a testing ground for futuristic healthcare solutions, and help build on the substantia­l progress that has been made.

The year has started well for healthcare in the UAE. Dubai’s Latifa Hospital announced last week it will expand its facilities. In addition, the Dubai Health Authority has created a new annual fund to offer free and discounted treatments to low-income patients. Medicine price-reduction initiative­s – overseen by the Ministry of Health – have continued in earnest. Further efforts to foster domestic health provision and train homegrown doctors would be welcome. Ultimately the future of the nation’s healthcare lies in durable initiative­s like these, rather than the futuristic innovation­s on show this week, although there is always room for both.

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