GITEX Africa 2025 is set to showcase how AI and drones can revolutionize healthcare delivery across the continent. The event will highlight innovative technologies that enable remote diagnosis and treatment, such as AI-powered apps and drone deliveries of medical supplies. With Africa's health tech sector attracting significant investments, the potential for improved healthcare access is immense.
AI tools are poised to enhance diagnostic accuracy, enabling quicker identification of diseases like tuberculosis and cancer. Telemedicine will bridge the gap between patients in remote areas and specialists, ensuring that expert care is accessible. The integration of the Internet of Medical Things (IoMT) will further empower healthcare providers to monitor chronic conditions and respond proactively to health crises.
• AI tools can significantly enhance diagnostic accuracy in remote healthcare.
• Telemedicine will connect patients with specialists across vast distances.
AI-powered diagnosis refers to the use of artificial intelligence to identify diseases quickly and accurately, which is crucial in areas with limited medical professionals.
Telemedicine allows patients to consult with healthcare specialists remotely, breaking down geographical barriers to access.
IoMT involves connected devices that monitor patient health and send alerts, enabling proactive healthcare management.
Isomorphic Labs, the AI drug discovery platform that was spun out of Google's DeepMind in 2021, has raised external capital for the first time. The $600
How to level up your teaching with AI. Discover how to use clones and GPTs in your classroom—personalized AI teaching is the future.
Trump's Third Term? AI already knows how this can be done. A study shows how OpenAI, Grok, DeepSeek & Google outline ways to dismantle U.S. democracy.
Sam Altman today revealed that OpenAI will release an open weight artificial intelligence model in the coming months. "We are excited to release a powerful new open-weight language model with reasoning in the coming months," Altman wrote on X.