autonomous mobile clinic
Autonomous Mobile Clinics: Empowering Affordable Anywhere Anytime Healthcare Access
Liu, Shaoshan, Huang, Yuzhang, Shi, Leiyu
We are facing a global healthcare crisis today as the healthcare cost is ever climbing, but with the aging population, government fiscal revenue is ever dropping. To create a more efficient and effective healthcare system, three technical challenges immediately present themselves: healthcare access, healthcare equity, and healthcare efficiency. An autonomous mobile clinic solves the healthcare access problem by bringing healthcare services to the patient by the order of the patient's fingertips. Nevertheless, to enable a universal autonomous mobile clinic network, a three-stage technical roadmap needs to be achieved: In stage one, we focus on solving the inequity challenge in the existing healthcare system by combining autonomous mobility and telemedicine. In stage two, we develop an AI doctor for primary care, which we foster from infancy to adulthood with clean healthcare data. With the AI doctor, we can solve the inefficiency problem. In stage three, after we have proven that the autonomous mobile clinic network can truly solve the target clinical use cases, we shall open up the platform for all medical verticals, thus enabling universal healthcare through this whole new system.
Council Post: From Barefoot Doctors To Autonomous Mobile Clinics
Dr. Shaoshan Liu is CEO and founder of PerceptIn, an intelligent robotics company. Although the world has witnessed tremendous economic growth and technological advancements in the past few decades, today there are still over 600 million people living in extreme poverty. Most of these people live in the least developed countries (LDCs), and while regular visits to our family doctors have become a routine in our daily lives, people who live in LDCs have very limited or even no access to healthcare. When we examine the details of healthcare expenditure data, the numbers are staggering: Developed countries (e.g., the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development, or OECD countries) such as the U.S. spend roughly 10% of their GDP on healthcare, yet many LDCs don't even have 5% of their GDP to spare on healthcare. Realizing the seriousness of this problem, the United Nations Sustainable Development Goal 3 (SDG 3) has declared a universal health goal to ensure healthy lives and promote well-being for all by 2030.
- Health & Medicine (1.00)
- Banking & Finance > Economy (0.71)