India begins initiative to build medical datasets representing the Indian population


It will help accelerate research and innovation in AI technology for healthcare.


Healthcare IT News
By
Adam Ang
September 23, 2022


Site editor


Joaquim Cardoso MSc.
Health Transformation Institute (HTI)

October 12, 2022


The Indian Council of Medical Research, India’s peak body for biomedical research, is working on a national initiative to produce high-quality medical datasets that represent the diversity of the Indian population.


It has signed a memorandum of understanding with the Indian Institute of Science (IISc) to collaborate on this effort, with ARTPARK (AI & Robotics Technology Park), a not-for-profit organisation promoted by IISc, serving as their partner for technology development and programme management.


According to a press statement, a team driving this initiative will help standardise the data collection from partner medical institutions and curate those data with the aim to make them available to the broader community of researchers and innovators in India.


Photo by: JGI/Tom Grill/Blend Images

WHY IT MATTERS


IISc said in a statement that building quality and curated medical imaging datasets that represent India’s diversity of people, settings, and needs will accelerate research and innovation to realise AI’s promise to improve healthcare access and boost staff productivity.


… building quality and curated medical imaging datasets that represent India’s diversity of people, settings, and needs …

… will accelerate research and innovation to realise AI’s promise to improve healthcare access and boost staff productivity.


Such data, it further said, will also be instrumental in the assessment of AI-based tools, thus accelerating their deployment.


Photo by: JGI/Tom Grill/Blend Images

THE LARGER TREND


Other population health initiatives around Asia-Pacific also seek to harness population-level data to generate deep insights into their respective health issues and needs to improve health outcomes.


  • For one, Singapore’s Precision Health Research is conducting a large-scale population study with genomics technology firm Illumina to build a comprehensive precision medicine database to generate insights into Asian genomic diversity and Asian-specific diseases. 
  • Another Singaporean institution, the National Cancer Centre Singapore, is involved in an effort to build a local clinico-genomic database to gain insights that will drive better outcomes for cancer patients.

Photo by: JGI/Tom Grill/Blend Images

ON THE RECORD


In welcoming this national initiative, Govindan Rangarajan, professor and director of IISc, said: 

“Our goal is to bring together the best of technology, data science, and medical research to improve healthcare. 

This partnership with ICMR will enable us to do exactly that by creating invaluable datasets to propel the next generation of innovations for India and the world.”


“Our goal is to bring together the best of technology, data science, and medical research to improve healthcare.


Originally published at https://www.healthcareitnews.com on September 23, 2022.


Names mentioned:


Govindan Rangarajan, professor and director of IISc

Indian Institute of Science (IISc) to collaborate on this effort, with 

ARTPARK (AI & Robotics Technology Park)

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