A Hospital in the Cloud Bringing Health Care Anywhere in the World | Mohamed Aburawi | TED
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A Hospital in the Cloud Bringing Health Care Anywhere in the World | Mohamed Aburawi | TED

TED 14.01.2025 23 342 просмотров 541 лайков обн. 18.02.2026
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What if AI could help connect you with the right medical care, exactly when you need it? Health systems entrepreneur, surgeon and TED Fellow Mohamed Aburawi explores how his digital health platform, Speetar, uses AI to bridge the healthcare gap in underserved regions, like his native Libya, by connecting patients with doctors who truly understand their needs. (Recorded at TED Fellows Films 2024 on April 16, 2024) If you love watching TED Talks like this one, become a TED Member to support our mission of spreading ideas: https://ted.com/membership Follow TED! X: https://twitter.com/TEDTalks Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ted Facebook: https://facebook.com/TED LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/ted-conferences TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@tedtoks The TED Talks channel features talks, performances and original series from the world's leading thinkers and doers. Subscribe to our channel for videos on Technology, Entertainment and Design — plus science, business, global issues, the arts and more. Visit https://TED.com to get our entire library of TED Talks, transcripts, translations, personalized talk recommendations and more. Watch more: https://go.ted.com/mohamedaburawi https://youtu.be/ojZav0u29B4 TED's videos may be used for non-commercial purposes under a Creative Commons License, Attribution–Non Commercial–No Derivatives (or the CC BY – NC – ND 4.0 International) and in accordance with our TED Talks Usage Policy: https://www.ted.com/about/our-organization/our-policies-terms/ted-talks-usage-policy. For more information on using TED for commercial purposes (e.g. employee learning, in a film or online course), please submit a Media Request at https://media-requests.ted.com #TED #TEDTalks #health #healthcare

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  1. 0:00 Segment 1 (00:00 - 04:00) 724 сл.
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Segment 1 (00:00 - 04:00)

This is a picture from the Libyan-Tunisian borders. These are patients who couldn't find care within their own country. These ambulance cars carried my father, my grandma, before she passed away. And for me, this is emblematic of the challenge we're currently facing. We see a significant number of patients seeking care beyond their borders, and they should get care within their community. Currently, it's very difficult to do that just by training more doctors and building more medical schools or hospitals, because we will never be able to reach everyone everywhere. But if there was an AI doctor that can be with them and have the answers whenever they need them and where they need them, and having those answers being contextualized for that specific patient in that village, we would not see such dire consequences of years of underinvestment in health. I'm Mohamed Aburawi, a surgeon, and I have the privilege of leading our team at Speetar, a digital health platform that connects patients in remote communities across the Middle East and Africa, to physicians that understand their context, language and are able to help them best. It's basically a hospital in the cloud. This folder is how health records are kept in Libya. This file can hold so much in terms of documentation. And even then, it's very rare that you'll find a patient that will come to you with a file that has everything from their past history that they've kept perfectly neat together for you to just to kind of go through. As opposed to when I was working, for example, in one of the leading institutions in the US, I can just ask for patient's name, date of birth, log in, get every single procedure that was performed in the past 15 years. Because of the lack of digitization in these areas where we have ongoing volatility, a patient may be in one village today, tomorrow you will have conflict and they're in another one. And people don't really leave or migrate with their files in their backpacks like, oh, my health records. So you'll lose that. And you’ll lose every single allergy, procedure, medical problem, medication that they’ve had. And you’re constantly building that like, record from scratch. So essentially what we do is help patients capture their medical histories in a digital format. And then we make sure that record is available at their fingertips, in their phones, but also available for the doctors. And we continue to build on that record to make sure that patients get the best care possible whenever they need it. And that's kind of the capturing side of things, the capturing the data. And from there, we start to work on cleaning that data up and making sure it's consistent. And it could be fed into models that could later on start to kind of give these predictive analytics. But what we see with AI or this data economy in general is unfortunately a similar trend we've seen in the past with colonial powers, where now data is the new oil. There is a movement to capture as much data as possible. And for this data to be fed into the AI models that are currently being developed. And it’s being fed the data that exists in mostly the Western world where it's readily accessible, where you have electronic medical records. But when you look at certain villages in Libya or in other countries which are suffering now, going through conflict or have been historically kind of marginalized and underserved, there is not that attention to collecting data. We are not including the full spectrum of humanity. As we continue to build AI, we need to involve other countries in that data collection process, and not just assume that we can build a technology in the West and just parachute in. And because it's a medical AI, it will work perfectly there. It will not work. I hope it's a future where patients do not have to leave their countries or wait for months, sometimes even years, to get the proper care that they need. The writer William Gibson once said, “The future is already here -- it’s just not evenly distributed.” AI has the power to really make sure that quality of care is evenly distributed to everyone, everywhere.

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