An MRI scanner made by GE Healthcare at the Arab Health conference this week in Dubai. The device uses 80 per cent less helium – a non-renewable resource – than other models. Chris Whiteoak / The National
An MRI scanner made by GE Healthcare at the Arab Health conference this week in Dubai. The device uses 80 per cent less helium – a non-renewable resource – than other models. Chris Whiteoak / The National
An MRI scanner made by GE Healthcare at the Arab Health conference this week in Dubai. The device uses 80 per cent less helium – a non-renewable resource – than other models. Chris Whiteoak / The National
An MRI scanner made by GE Healthcare at the Arab Health conference this week in Dubai. The device uses 80 per cent less helium – a non-renewable resource – than other models. Chris Whiteoak / The Nati


Why Arab Health is more than a conference


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February 01, 2023

When Abu Dhabi’s first hospital was set up in 1960, it would have been almost impossible for its staff and patients to imagine the journey the country would take to becoming a regional health superpower.

The Oasis Hospital in Al Ain – initially a four-room clinic in a building donated by UAE Founding Father, the late Sheikh Zayed – was set up by US doctors Pat and Marian Kennedy. It would later be renamed the Kanad Hospital after the local pronunciation of the couple’s surname.

They tended to villagers and isolated communities whose lives had been blighted by a lack of health care. Blindness and glaucoma from blowing sand were common, and it was estimated that up to half of all Emirati infants and a third of mothers died during childbirth, or related complications.

In just a few decades, the UAE has left that hardship far behind to become a hub for cutting-edge medicine and a place where doctors, investors and governments come together to find 21st-century solutions to a new set of health challenges.

As part of that journey, more than 3,000 exhibitors from 70 countries are taking part in the annual Arab Health conference in Dubai this week. It is has become a flagship event for the heath sector – and one that offers plenty of reasons to be optimistic.

HIV, an illness that disproportionately affects the developing world, could become a thing of the past, with the chances of finding a cure being “quite high”, Prof Sharon Lewin, director of the Peter Doherty Institute for Infection and Immunity in Melbourne, told the fair.

Other illnesses could yield to innovations in artificial intelligence, audiences heard. On Monday, the same day that the Mohamed bin Zayed University of Artificial Intelligence celebrated its first cohort of graduates, the chief executive of UAE firm G42 Healthcare Ashish Koshy described how the health sector “learnt from the pandemic the value of data-driven decisions”.

More than 3,000 exhibitors from 70 countries are taking part in the annual conference in Dubai this week

Such technology is now of life-or-death importance. As Mr Koshy spoke, the Red Cross released a report warning that a second pandemic could be just around the corner, adding ominously that many governments were “dangerously unprepared”.

Pandemics pose one threat, but climate change and environmental degradation pose another. Research published in the journal Nature Climate Change last August found that 218 out of 375 infectious diseases confronted by humanity – about 58 per cent – have been at some point aggravated by climate change.

Hady El Khoury of GE Healthcare told Arab Health that sustainable practices were the only realistic course open to healthcare providers. “Having a clean environment and healthy world go hand in hand,” he said.

Arab Health has become the main forum to showcase sustainable health care and green medical technologies, such as GE Healthcare’s MRI scanner, which uses 80 per cent less helium – a non-renewable resource – than other models.

Such innovations are also part of the reason why Arab Health has proved to be such a financial success – Dh2.8 billion ($762.3 million) of deals were completed at last year's event.

Speaking at the opening of the event earlier this week, Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid, Vice President and Ruler of Dubai, said the UAE’s goal is to “to create a vibrant global healthcare hub that serves not only the needs of the people of our nation but also caters to the growing requirements of our vast region”.

Serving the region, and humanity, is another step on the journey from the UAE’s earliest hospitals to a point where the country has become a magnet for pioneering health care. This kind of progress demonstrates the dividends to be reaped from judicious and consistent investment in a nation’s health infrastructure, education and training.

SPECS

Engine: Two-litre four-cylinder turbo
Power: 235hp
Torque: 350Nm
Transmission: Nine-speed automatic
Price: From Dh167,500 ($45,000)
On sale: Now

THE DETAILS

Solo: A Star Wars Story

Dir: Ron Howard

Starring: Alden Ehrenreich, Emilia Clarke, Woody Harrelson

3/5

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Company%20profile
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Where to buy and try:

Nutritional yeast

DesertCart

Organic Foods & Café

Bulletproof coffee

Wild & The Moon

Amasake

Comptoir 102

DesertCart

Organic Foods & Café

Charcoal drinks and dishes

Various juice bars, including Comptoir 102

Bridgewater Tavern

3 Fils

Jackfruit

Supermarkets across the UAE

MATCH INFO

Manchester City 4 (Gundogan 8' (P), Bernardo Silva 19', Jesus 72', 75')

Fulham 0

Red cards: Tim Ream (Fulham)

Man of the Match: Gabriel Jesus (Manchester City)

The burning issue

The internal combustion engine is facing a watershed moment – major manufacturer Volvo is to stop producing petroleum-powered vehicles by 2021 and countries in Europe, including the UK, have vowed to ban their sale before 2040. The National takes a look at the story of one of the most successful technologies of the last 100 years and how it has impacted life in the UAE. 

Read part four: an affection for classic cars lives on

Read part three: the age of the electric vehicle begins

Read part two: how climate change drove the race for an alternative 

Updated: February 10, 2023, 7:26 AM`