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Slew of AI tools for Singapore's public healthcare in the works
Slew of AI tools for Singapore's public healthcare in the works

Straits Times

time3 days ago

  • Health
  • Straits Times

Slew of AI tools for Singapore's public healthcare in the works

Alexandra Hospital's reasearch team have come up with CareScribe, an AI tool that helps to shorten handover processes between nurses. ST PHOTO: NG SOR LUAN Slew of AI tools for Singapore's public healthcare in the works SINGAPORE - A chatbot that breaks down the jargon in medical reports and an app that assesses one's health by analysing the photo of one's tongue are among a slew of artificial intelligence (AI) tools that the public sector is developing here. Showcased at the inaugural AI Accelerate conference organised by national healthcare tech provider Synapxe on June 16 , these innovations are poised to help patients and boost the productivity of healthcare workers. Synapxe provides tech solutions to all three public sector healthcare clusters - SingHealth, National Healthcare Group, and National University Health System - in Singapore. Here are some of the key projects. 1. HealthHub AI This AI assistant will be rolled out on national healthcare portal HealthHub 's website later in 2025 . The feature might be introduced on the app in the future, depending on feedback gathered from users. It will be able to answer healthcare-related and administrative questions from users in English, Chinese, Malay and Tamil. Users can also enter their gender, age, and any pre-existing condition to receive a more tailored response. 'It serves as a convenient tool to enhance health literacy by improving access to credible, evidence-based information that is curated for Singapore's unique context,' said Mr Andy Ta, chief data officer and director of data analytics and AI at Synapxe. Information given to users are sourced from HealthHub's website, which contains content contributed by public healthcare agencies and workgroups such as the Health Promotion Board and National Medication Information Workgroup. 'It supports our public health goals by guiding users to relevant content quickly, helping them make informed decisions and ultimately encouraging better health outcomes,' said Mr Ta. A beta version has been available for use on HealthHub's website since April , and members of the public can give their feedback until the end of August . So far, frequently asked questions include subsidies on health screenings and vaccinations, and lifestyle tips. There are also plans to expand the range of supported languages, with Synapxe exploring the feasibility and stability of open-source and proprietary large-language models such as Sea-Lion developed by AI Singapore and Meralion developed by A*Star Institute for Infocomm Research. Meralion, developed using the national speech corpus , is able to understand at least eight regional languages including Singlish, and can understand multiple languages when spoken in the same sentence. Sealion supports 13 languages such as Thai and Vietnamese, and reflects the native characteristics of South-east Asia. Synapxe is also exploring a feature that lets users manage their appointment bookings via the AI assistant. Along with the new AI boost, there are also plans to unify HealthHub with cluster-specific apps - Health Buddy, NHG Cares and NUHS app - by 2027 into one platform to improve online accessibility of public healthcare services. 2. Lab Report Buddy Developed by Synapxe, this chatbot analyses medical lab reports uploaded by users and breaks down medical jargon, providing a comprehensible summary and explanation of the results. Lab Report Buddy aims to reduce the struggle that patients often face in understanding reports due to the limited consultation time to go over the details. For instance, a blood work report that contains results on haemoglobin and platelet levels might be displayed in numbers that are not interpreted. The chatbot would be able to summarise the results and inform the patient if the levels are considered low or high, and if a follow-up review with a doctor is necessary. The bot is also trained to avoid phrases that might cause panic, lead the patient to self-diagnose, or make assumptions about the patient's health status or medical history. The bot is being tested and validated in real-world settings at present . 3. Synseh An app is being developed to allow users to take a photo of their tongue and answer a few questions to receive wellness recommendations. Synseh will base its recommendations on the teachings of Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM). For instance, a tongue's colour, shape, coating and moisture level can provide insights into the condition of a patient's internal organs, the presence of pathogenic factors, and the flow of blood and Qi (life force). The app uses advanced computer vision techniques to detect subtle changes in tongue features. 'A pale tongue may indicate a deficiency in Qi or blood, while a red tongue might point to an excess of heat in the body,' said a Synapxe spokesperson. A physician would then be able to give advice on how to combat excess body heat, such as incorporating cooling fruits and vegetables into one's diet. The app is trained based on tongue photos that are openly sourced data, which are then labelled by physicians and lecturers from the Singapore College of TCM. The app is currently a proof-of-concept, and Synapxe said it is closely monitoring the outcome before making plans for further deployment. 'Tongue diagnosis is just a starting for us to venture into the TCM domain,' said the spokesperson. 'Through this, we hope to evaluate and gather feedback on the application of AI in TCM in Singapore.' 4. CareScribe It often takes up to one hour to hand over information about patients between nurses during shift changes. An AI tool called CareScribe , developed by Alexandra Hospital's Research Office team with the help of IT services and consulting firm Avanade , aims to make this process shorter and neater. 'Most handovers are currently conducted through verbal communication with handwritten documentation, which can present challenges in maintaining consistency and completeness,' said Dr Ravi Shankar, principal investigator and research fellow at Alexandra Hospital's medical affairs research office . CareScribe, which currently can be accessed via a webpage, allows nurses to upload photos or voice notes, which would then be transcribed and summarised in a structured format. Handover notes usually include information such as a patient's medical background, current condition, prescribed medication, acuity levels, fall risks, and clinical observations in unstructured paragraphs. The tool is able to organise information in an ABCDEFG template, which stands for acuity assessment, background history and behaviour, conditions and care plans, drugs, equipment, family and goals. Critical clinical information such as patient safety alerts, medication-related updates, and scheduled procedures would also be highlighted by the system. After having received approval by the ethics board recently, the tool is currently undergoing preliminary evaluation at Alexandra Hospital with a group of nursing staff. Any plans to integrate it with existing hospital systems will depend on research outcomes, security assessments, and institutional requirements, said Dr Shankar. 5. Healix (Health Empowerment thru Advanced Learning and Intelligent Exchange) Launched in May 2024, Healix is a cloud-based platform that all public healthcare professionals can use to accelerate the development of their AI projects. It consolidates data from across healthcare systems in Singapore, which are de-identified and encrypted. A range of tools and frameworks - such as pre-built algorithms and libraries and custom development options - are available for use to develop AI models. For example, the National University Health System (NUHS) used Healix to analyse de-identified medical data and trained an AI model to predict the near-term risk of diabetes, hypertension and hyperlipidaemia. 6. Aspire (AI-enabled Short Performance Physical Battery Evaluation) By getting patients to do a series of physical tests on camera, this AI-powered tool allows clinicians to screen for the prevalence and severity of frailty and sarcopenia. To assess for such conditions, patients are usually asked to do the Short Physical Performance Battery (SPPB) evaluation, which would involve actions such as walking a set distance, sitting down and standing up five consecutive times, and balancing while standing. Aspire digitalises and semi-automates this test, which aims to make screening faster, less reliant on manpower, and more accessible. 'At this point, Aspire is still a research project and is undergoing clinical trials in Tan Tock Seng Hospital (TTSH) and NHG polyclinics, and is used by clinicians within the healthcare facilities,' said associate professor Karen Chua, who is also a senior consultant at TTSH's rehabilitation centre. 'Future iterations could see this being scaled to community hospitals and partners, as well as caregivers to conduct the test remotely.' Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

WellTheory Raises $5M to Launch AI-Powered Care Platform Helping to Scale Autoimmune Care Nationwide
WellTheory Raises $5M to Launch AI-Powered Care Platform Helping to Scale Autoimmune Care Nationwide

Yahoo

time22-05-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

WellTheory Raises $5M to Launch AI-Powered Care Platform Helping to Scale Autoimmune Care Nationwide

New funding supports enterprise and health plan growth as the company unveils Care Hub and Care Scribe, transforming care delivery through AI SAN FRANCISCO, May 22, 2025--(BUSINESS WIRE)--WellTheory, the leading whole-person care platform for autoimmune disease, today announced the close of $5M in new funding and the successful rollout of its proprietary AI tools, Care Hub and Care Scribe, across its care operations. New investors Samsung Next, Opal Ventures, and Up2 Fund joined the round, with continued support from existing investors Accel, OVO Fund, and BoxGroup. These milestones mark a major leap forward in the company's mission to make autoimmune care more accessible, scalable, and effective for the 50 million Americans navigating these chronic conditions, such as rheumatoid arthritis, lupus and multiple sclerosis. The new capital will fuel WellTheory's expansion into the employer and health plan markets, and accelerate the development of its AI-powered care infrastructure for both providers and members. "AI is no longer a nice-to-have in care delivery — its essential infrastructure," said Ellen Rudolph, CEO and Co-founder of WellTheory. "This new round of funding is allowing us to double down on our AI strategy, streamline the most time-consuming parts of care, and expand into new markets. We're leading the charge in making whole-person, root-cause care more accessible, personalized, and effective — and bringing it to scale through our growing partnerships with employers and health plans." WellTheory's Care Scribe, the company's proprietary AI assistant, now supports its Care Team by attending member sessions, transcribing conversations, and drafting follow-up notes and personalized Care Plans — all for provider review and customization. The tool has reduced provider prep and documentation time by 65%, enabling a more efficient and focused care experience. Alongside Care Scribe, the newly launched Care Hub acts as the unified command center for WellTheory's providers — aggregating member data, session history, and lab insights in one place. With dynamic workflows tailored to each session type, the Care Hub streamlines pre- and post-session tasks and enables automated compliance tracking. The result is a smoother care journey for both providers and members. "Care delivery for patients with autoimmune disease is incredibly complex—our team built these tools to help give our Care Team time back for what matters most: supporting our members," said Claire Rudolph, Co-Founder and Head of Product at WellTheory. "With WellTheory's Care Hub and Care Scribe, we're building the modern infrastructure autoimmune care has always needed — intelligent, integrated systems that streamline repetitive tasks, amplify what makes care human, and equip our team to deliver more personalized, responsive support at scale." This meta-intelligence will power a more personalized, proactive experience for members, surfacing symptom patterns, optimizing interventions, and enabling the Care Team to deliver precision support at scale. By connecting the dots across a fragmented care journey, WellTheory aims to not only reduce the burden of autoimmune disease — but also to fundamentally reimagine how it's managed. With the Care Hub and Care Scribe now fully deployed, WellTheory is focused on what comes next: leveraging its growing ecosystem of data — including session transcripts, lab results, symptom tracking, lifestyle inputs, and provider insights — to build a next-generation intelligence layer across the member journey. Future product investments include deeper automation in areas like lab workflows and scheduling, expanded analytics and care optimization tools for providers, and a reimagined member-facing experience grounded in personalization, guidance, and long-term engagement. About WellTheory: WellTheory is a virtual care platform reversing the autoimmune epidemic by filling the gaps left behind in traditional healthcare. WellTheory offers a research-backed proprietary program that addresses the root cause of autoimmunity and treats the whole person with the aim to reduce symptoms, improve quality of life, and lower costs. WellTheory's platform centers around evidence-based, high-touch care led by an interdisciplinary team of autoimmune experts, including licensed registered dietitians and board-certified health coaches. It's an anti-symptom-masking model that goes beyond the pill, built by autoimmune patients and validated by decades of clinical research. View source version on Contacts Hanna Refvikwelltheory@ Sign in to access your portfolio

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