Global EditionASIA 中文雙語Fran?ais
Opinion
Home / Opinion / China and the World Roundtable

Bright path ahead for AI and public wellness

By Soumya Swaminathan and Harkabir Singh Jandu | China Daily | Updated: 2025-05-26 07:17
Share
Share - WeChat
Ma Xuejing/China Daily

The rapid advancement of artificial intelligence and digital health technologies is revolutionizing global healthcare. These innovative tools present unparalleled opportunities to enhance the efficiency and equity of healthcare systems worldwide. But to achieve these goals, it is necessary to overcome substantial challenges, encompassing technological, ethical, and governance issues, particularly in the context of global disruptions such as the United States' withdrawal from the World Health Organization, geopolitical tensions and a weakening of multilateral collaboration.

Today, AI is becoming increasingly embedded in the entire spectrum of medicine. In research and development, AI is massively accelerating drug discovery and enzyme design by predicting protein structures at pace and scale far surpassing human ability. Tellingly, developers of one of the leading AI solutions for this — Google DeepMind — won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 2024 for their unprecedented impact on biological research through AI.

Similarly, AI is helping with clinical trial design and analyzing vast biomedical datasets to uncover novel therapeutic targets. For patients, AI supports diagnostics through imaging analysis, predictive analytics and natural language processing. For example, AI-based retinal scans can detect not only eye disorders such as diabetic retinopathy and glaucoma but also aging disorders such as stroke and Parkinson's disease and heart failure using the same retinal images. AI is already being used in low- and middle-income countries for reading chest X-rays to flag suspected tuberculosis and chronic obstructive pulmonary diseases within seconds.

There are also applications to diagnose malnutrition through image analyses and predict high risk pregnancies. People living in low-resource settings, where there are no specialists, can now get accurate diagnoses from specialists sitting far away who study their pathology slides or MRI scans. This has potential for improving health equity globally.

AI is also helping transform promotive and preventive public health functions. It is enhancing disease and risk factor surveillance, improving outbreak prediction, and facilitating decision-making. In South American and many other countries, AI has been routinely forecasting granular short-term trends of air pollution, informing people in advance to take mobility decisions to avoid pollutants, and municipalities to manage/improve air quality.

Additionally, AI is improving health communication by customizing messages and predicting behavioural responses. In low-resource settings, AI is contributing to efficient healthcare system management and providing supportive tools for frontline workers.

While solutions for use cases will proliferate and modulate, it is critical that the ethics of AI always takes primacy while designing frameworks and solutions for use. The WHO's recent guidelines on ethics and governance of AI for healthcare are a step in the right direction. As we forge ahead, we must constantly identify and mitigate ethical issues that are relevant to global health, some of which are mentioned here.

We must invest in creating and curating diverse and representative datasets for eliminating the bias in algorithms and data, and making AI solutions more accurate.

Also, we need to augment humans-in-the-loop systems for guiding AI training and use in fields such as image-based diagnosis, patient counseling, clinical-decision systems and AI-robotic surgery. People should guide healthcare algorithm training, and rather than replacing clinicians, AI should augment them.

Besides, home and community-based AI tools must be designed for offline functionality and low-resource environments — this entails lightweight apps, local data storage, and user interfaces that do not assume literacy or tech fluency — and AI solutions should be built with, not just for, communities. To realize that, it is necessary to involve local engineers, clinicians, and patients in the design and evaluation process.

AI exemplifies the role of the private sector as one of the driving forces in healthcare outcomes. Incubating and promoting private initiatives through policy will play a pivotal role in the impact of AI. Parallelly, we must create frameworks for determining responsibilities and liabilities unique to applications and contexts, and governments need to balance entrepreneurial goals and prowess with social goals and regulatory systems.

Currently, the AI regulatory frameworks of China, the European Union, Japan, the United Kingdom and the United States are recognized as standout, even if nascent, governance architectures. However, there is also a need to devote considerable thought to how we promote "public health AI exchange" and AI as a public good across borders, especially in the current state of geopolitics, because all the public health gains across the world are built on sharing of ideas and talents, collaborations and joint action.

While exploring the power of AI it behooves us to take the wide view of determinants of health rather than limit ourselves to healthcare delivery. AI can help solve problems in mental health, air and water pollution, food security, housing, climate risk adaptation, digital — increasingly recognized as a determinant — and other factors. And global public health must enhance multi-sectoral action through AI for improving lives.

For the first time in human history, we are at the cusp of an era in which a farmer in Tikrit (Iraq), a trader in Guangzhou (China) and a schoolteacher in Lima (Peru) can access the same AI-enabled diagnostics and curative healthcare services at similar cost. It is for society to use scientific temper, ethics and political will to use AI to ensure equity in global health outcomes.

 

Soumya Swaminathan is chairperson of M.S. Swaminathan Research Foundation, India, former chief scientist of World Health Organization and former director-general of Indian Council of Medical Research.

 

 

Harkabir Singh Jandu is an independent public health consultant.

The views don't necessarily reflect those of China Daily. 

If you have a specific expertise, or would like to share your thought about our stories, then send us your writings at opinion@chinadaily.com.cn, and comment@chinadaily.com.cn.

Most Viewed in 24 Hours
Top
BACK TO THE TOP
English
Copyright 1995 - . All rights reserved. The content (including but not limited to text, photo, multimedia information, etc) published in this site belongs to China Daily Information Co (CDIC). Without written authorization from CDIC, such content shall not be republished or used in any form. Note: Browsers with 1024*768 or higher resolution are suggested for this site.
License for publishing multimedia online 0108263

Registration Number: 130349
FOLLOW US
主站蜘蛛池模板: 国产中文字幕乱人伦在线观看| 女人与公拘交酡全过程i | 国产AV无码专区亚洲AV麻豆 | 最近最好最新2018中文字幕免费| 免费观看国产网址你懂的| 黄色一级一毛片| 国产综合免费视频| 一级一级一片免费高清| 日韩丰满少妇无码内射| 亚洲日韩一区二区一无码| 精品国偷自产在线视频| 国产成人av一区二区三区在线观看| 99re九精品视频在线视频| 性欧美18~19sex高清播放| 久久精品亚洲一区二区三区浴池| 欧美粗大猛烈老熟妇| 六月丁香色婷婷| 色综合久久天天影视网| 国产激情自拍视频| 91看片淫黄大片.在线天堂 | 工囗番漫画全彩无遮拦老师| 久久精品国产日本波多野结衣| 欧美日韩无线码在线观看| 免费女人18毛片a级毛片视频 | 遭绝伦三个老头侵犯波多野结衣| 国产精品欧美亚洲韩国日本 | jux-222椎名由奈在线观看| 无码人妻精品一区二区三区蜜桃| 五月综合色婷婷| 欧美成人鲁丝片在线观看| 伊人色综合网一区二区三区 | 久久精品免费一区二区| 欧美成人精品高清在线观看| 免费中文字幕在线国语| 色88久久久久高潮综合影院| 国产成人av乱码在线观看| 伊人影视在线观看日韩区| 在线免费视频a| 一区二区三区视频网站| 无码精品人妻一区二区三区漫画| 九九热在线视频观看这里只有精品|