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ASIA News

By Dean Koh | 05:18 am | April 07, 2020
There are currently more than 16 life treatment centers in operation in South Korea.
By Dean Koh | 03:00 am | March 24, 2020
The service provided is a remote health consultation service, which means that doctors should advise patients according to their conditions and symptoms, not diagnosing or prescribing medicines.
By Dean Koh | 05:12 am | March 20, 2020
While public hospitals aim to improve their operational efficiency and medical outcomes, private hospitals are making a digital push to enhance their value proposition.  
By Dean Koh | 06:21 am | March 13, 2020
The latest upgrade makes it easier for people to control who sees and accesses their health information.  
By Dean Koh | 12:38 am | March 10, 2020
On March 9, the Innovation and Technology Commission (ITC) in Hong Kong launched a special call under the Public Sector Trial Scheme for projects to support product development and application of technologies for the prevention and control of COVID-19.
By Dean Koh | 10:46 am | February 14, 2020
iThermo reduces the need for manual temperature screening, and provides prompts where secondary checks can be carried out for feverish persons identified by the solution.
By Dean Koh | 10:33 pm | February 11, 2020
A new study, conducted by Korean academic hospitals and Lunit, a medical AI company specializing in developing AI solutions for radiology and oncology, demonstrated the benefits of AI-aided breast cancer detection from mammography images.
By Dean Koh | 04:08 am | January 31, 2020
Japanese giant Sumitomo Dainippon Pharma and Oxford-headquartered AI-driven drug discovery company Exscientia yesterday announced that they have created a new compound which is in the process of entering human clinical trials in Japan.
By Dean Koh | 01:36 am | January 21, 2020
These services include digital diagnostic pathology, access to proton therapy information, teaching surgery, an AI-enabled care for in-patients and an autonomous robot for operating rooms.
By Dean Koh | 10:48 pm | January 19, 2020
Better health information systems that allow every Thai to access their personal health information, including diabetes risk and screening records, could contribute to reducing unmet need.