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Making time for wellness

KAUST ·

KAUST Health annually celebrates World Health Day, with the 2018 theme focused on wellness. The event included activities like a Masterchef competition, nutrition advice, wellness quizzes, and skin care tips. BUPA presented its Tebtom Program aimed at holistic healthcare for the KAUST community. Why it matters: Such initiatives at GCC universities raise awareness of preventative health and wellness, contributing to healthier lifestyles and community well-being.

Improving patient care with computer vision

MBZUAI ·

MBZUAI's BioMedIA lab, led by Mohammad Yaqub, is developing AI solutions for healthcare challenges in cardiology, pulmonology, and oncology using computer vision. Yaqub's previous research analyzed fetal ultrasound images to correlate bone development with maternal vitamin D levels. The lab is now applying image analysis to improve the treatment of head and neck cancer using PET and CT scans. Why it matters: This research demonstrates the potential of AI and computer vision to improve diagnostic accuracy and accessibility of healthcare in the region and beyond.

Physics-Based Deep Learning for Medical Imaging

MBZUAI ·

Pascal Fua from EPFL gave a talk at MBZUAI on physics-based deep learning for medical imaging. The talk covered how self-supervision and knowledge of human anatomy and physics can improve deep learning algorithms when training data is limited. Applications discussed included endoscopic heart surgery, colonoscopy, and intubation. Why it matters: This highlights the growing importance of domain knowledge and self-supervision in overcoming data scarcity challenges for AI in healthcare applications within the region.

The AI will see you now

MBZUAI ·

MBZUAI is developing AI algorithms to intelligently process data from wearables and home sensors for remote patient monitoring. The algorithms aim to analyze multiple strands of health data to provide a more comprehensive view of a patient's health, distinguishing between genuine emergencies and benign situations. MBZUAI's provost, Professor Fakhri Karray, believes this approach could handle 20-25% of diagnoses virtually, reducing the burden on healthcare systems. Why it matters: This research could significantly improve healthcare efficiency and accessibility in the UAE and beyond by enabling more effective remote patient monitoring and reducing unnecessary hospital visits.

KAUST students take game-changing AR tool to medical market

KAUST ·

KAUST students Daniya Boges and Dr. Corrado Calì developed an AR tool for medical applications, leading to the startup IntraVides. The project was supported by KAUST's Smart Health Initiative, which provided access to AR/VR facilities and seed funding through the KAUST Innovation Fund. The KAUST Entrepreneurship Center also helped incubate the idea from concept to business. Why it matters: This highlights KAUST's role in fostering innovation and entrepreneurship in healthcare through strategic investments in advanced technology and dedicated support programs.

Sir Michael Brady on why healthcare AI must move from detection to articulation

MBZUAI ·

Sir Michael Brady, professor at Oxford and MBZUAI, argues that AI in healthcare must move beyond pattern recognition to causal understanding. He states that clinicians require AI models to articulate their reasoning behind diagnoses and therapy recommendations, not just provide statistical scores. He believes AI's immediate impact will be in personalized medicine, tailoring treatments to the individual rather than relying on epidemiological averages. Why it matters: This perspective highlights the critical need for explainable AI in sensitive domains like healthcare, paving the way for more trustworthy and clinically relevant AI applications in the region.

A career with purpose

KAUST ·

In a 2018 keynote, Saudi Aramco VP Nasser Al-Nafisee recounted the rapid construction of KAUST. Al-Nafisee described building KAUST in under three years as a "mission impossible" requiring immense effort. He advised KAUST attendees to push beyond their comfort zones and adopt a "can-do attitude". Why it matters: The talk highlights the ambitious vision and rapid development that characterize Saudi Arabia's investments in research and technology.

Smart Bandage wins IEEE MECAP’16 Best Paper Award

KAUST ·

A smart bandage developed by KAUST's Associate Professor Atif Shamim and Ph.D. student Mohammed Farooqui won the IEEE MECAP’16 Best Paper Award. The smart bandage is a medical device that wirelessly communicates wound parameters and abnormalities to healthcare providers. It monitors the wound's recovery process. Why it matters: This recognition highlights the innovative research and development in healthcare technology emerging from Saudi Arabia.