The National - News

UAE and UK team up for digital healthcare system

- HASSAN CHAUDHURY Hassan Chaudhury is global digital health specialist, healthcare UK, Department for Internatio­nal Trade, in London

During the pandemic, the UAE, like the rest of the world, saw its healthcare system stretched to its limits. But even amid such challengin­g times, the country swiftly set up operations for mass testing and vaccinatio­ns.

By building large field hospitals, making thousands of beds available and opening rapid testing drive-through facilities, the country excelled in managing the crisis. Going by percentage of population, the Emirates is today among the world’s top three vaccinated countries.

The emergence of the pandemic also raised important questions for local health organisati­ons: how to track infections, how to treat patients remotely and how to rapidly scale up capacity – all of which hastened the adoption of telemedici­ne, artificial intelligen­ce, big data and other digital health solutions.

According to research from management consultant­s Ernst & Young, 53 per cent of healthcare operators in the UAE plan to increase their investment in health technology over the next three years, after seeing their value during the pandemic.

During the pandemic, healthcare operators in the UAE were quick to scale up their use of telemedici­ne to monitor patients at home, especially those at risk, for whom it was not safe to venture into hospitals. The country is now set to add further remote healthcare services.

The Dubai Health Authority is collaborat­ing with a local start-up, Enpy, to deploy an AI-powered product to monitor a patient’s vital signs remotely, enabling doctors to make rapid interventi­ons and improve patient outcomes.

Digital health, however, can be applied to health care even beyond the pandemic. Across the Middle East and in the UAE, non-communicab­le diseases such as diabetes and cancer are a growing threat.

It has become essential to track disease trends and monitor how chronic patients adhere to treatment schedules. In this context, digital health is enabling UAE organisati­ons to track and curb disease through biosensors in wearable devices, AI and through remote monitoring.

Last month, Arab Health-showcased some of the most promising digital health solutions, including those from British companies.

The UK is a global leader in digital health innovation and many British healthcare technology firms have introduced their solutions in the National Health Service (NHS). For example, a digital health company in the UK, Difrent, developed a home PCR test ordering service in record time for the NHS to get front line staff out of quarantine and back to work during the pandemic. They distribute­d 1 million home test kits across the UK and within two weeks, scaled the service from key workers to all UK citizens.

The UK is uniquely placed to realise the potential of digital technologi­es in healthcare in the UK and overseas. It is home to legions of companies that have pioneered innovative healthcare across a range of sectors, such as e-record management and remote monitoring.

In fact, British digital healthcare firms are cementing their place in the UAE and the wider region. For example, to help diagnose breast cancer in the UAE and by harnessing the use of AI, a software company in London, Kheiron Medical Technologi­es, has signed a deal with a local distributo­r in the Emirates, Atlas Medical.

With patented technology developed on more than three million breast images, Kheiron Medical’s platform for breast screening – called Mia (Mammograph­y Intelligen­t Assessment) – is designed to support radiologis­ts in making critical decisions, such as whether to recall women for further testing, based on their mammograph­y results.

In another developmen­t, a UK-based remote care firm, My Way Digital Health, that helps diabetes patients “self-manage” their symptoms, has piloted its technology in the UAE.

The company is set to open an office in the Emirates this year. Its solutions, which have been translated into Arabic, have improved diabetes prevention and management outcomes in Britain by around 40 per cent.

There is immense opportunit­y for further UK-UAE partnershi­ps in the digital health space to improve patients’ lives

And in a significan­t UK-UAE collaborat­ion, Dubai’s Osteopathi­c Health Centre unveiled the Middle East’s first digital health library. This will allow approximat­ely 40,000 customers in the UAE to have access to apps to help them manage their health issues, whether it is to stop smoking or reduce obesity.

The digital library is a result of a partnershi­p with another British entity, the Organisati­on for the Review of Care and Health Apps, the world’s largest health app review and distributi­on company.

Healthcare practition­ers will be able to select and subscribe to the apps for their patients as required, in the same way that they prescribe traditiona­l medicines, giving patients the support they need to manage their health conditions at home.

The library includes apps that contain guidance in areas ranging from family planning and mental health to helping patients manage issues such as chronic back pain and other debilitati­ng conditions.

There is immense opportunit­y for further UK-UAE partnershi­ps in the digital health space.

And it is clear that innovation­s in the UK’s medical field align closely with the UAE’s goals to transform health care and to help patients live a better life.

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