Apollo hospitals opens the Digital Health Center, a precise Medicine Research Center
Apollo Hospitals in India and England University of Leicester has established cooperation with the founding of the Research Center for Health and Precision Medicine.
The center, which has two center based on the Apollo University campus in Chittoor and Glenfield Hospital in Leicester, will develop recent digital and personalized solutions using advanced analytical approaches, focusing on cardiovascular diseases, acute and emergency medicine and multi-chorus.
“WITH [Centre for Digital Health and Precision Medicine]We aspire to transform healthcare services by improving the prediction of the disease, prevention, diagnosis and management in acute and chronic conditions … “commented Dr. Prathap C Redda, president of the founder of the Hospital Apollo.
The master’s program in the field of computational health health sciences together with the mental nursing program will also be offered as part of this partnership between the two organizations.
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Meanwhile, Apollo Hospitals has recently established cooperation with the private Mayapada Healthcare Group in Indonesia.
Based on their memorandum, hospitals will cooperate in improving patient care and healthcare availability using advanced technologies, such as Teletradiology, E-Ic and AI.
The partnership also includes training programs, and Apollo hospitals are arranging up to 1,000 specialists for Mayapada healthcare facilities. They will develop programs in specialized areas, including oncology, cardiology, neurology and transplant surgery.
In addition, Apollo hospitals give Mayapada management knowledge in running the upcoming hospital in Batam.
Singapore General Hospital develops an application for bile detection
Singapore General Hospital is currently testing a mobile application that allows you to study jaundice in newborns.
The application called BilisG was developed in cooperation with Singhealth Polyclinics and Synapxe. The application works on artificial intelligence to analyze the levels of bilirubin or cross the child’s skin. Pictures of their forehead, chest and abdomen with a specially designed sticker for colic calibration are recorded using a smartphone camera.
Although such a mobile application is not recent, the existing ones are narrow by the repertoire of skin shades and a single reference point. “This prompted us to develop our own application,” said Professor SGH Alvin NGEOW, BilisG’s main investigator.
The research team now wants to test their application on various smartphone operating systems and camera specifications. They also plan to conduct a pilot examination to assess the clinical enforceability of the application.
Mobile educational channel for Vietnamese healthcare employees
Ho Chi Minh Center for Disease Control (HCDC) in Vietnam established cooperation with healthcare employees to provide educational resources for Vietnamese healthcare employees.
A dedicated educational channel for HCPS in Vietnam will be available in the Docquita application within three years. HCDC is aimed at achieving over 3,000 Vietnamese employees in various fields of healthcare. The channel aims to provide them with updated information on the progress of disease prevention and professional guidelines.
Live health documentation in the Samsung Health application in India
Samsung in India added a recent function of medical documentation in its mobile health application.
According to the media message, the function of medical documentation allows users to create and access their Ayushman Bharat health account.
Samsung cooperated with Eka Care to integrate its mobile application with the Ecosystem of Digital Health Documentation of the Indian Government.
In addition, Samsung has introduced a QR code scanner in its application, from which users can apply to receive a virtual token in hospitals and clinics in accordance with ABDM during OPD visits.