预算辩论 · 2026-03-04 · 第 15 届国会

2026卫生部供给委员会辩论:生成式AI辅助临床文档

MOH Committee of Supply 2026 — Generative AI for Clinical Documentation

AI 与医疗AI 与公共部门 争议度 1 · 信息发布

MOH供给委员会辩论中,议员Dr Choo Pei Ling专题发言"医疗技术与AI"。她指出临床医生面临临床复杂性、行政负担和协调需求三重压力,生成式AI可辅助医疗文档记录,临床决策支持系统可综合处理复杂信息。她呼吁推动AI在医疗中的实际应用,强调技术落地需要解决从实验到规模化的障碍。

关键要点

  • 生成式AI辅助临床文档记录
  • 临床决策支持系统综合复杂信息
  • 医生面临三重压力:临床、行政、协调
  • 需解决AI从实验到规模化的障碍
政策信号

医疗AI应用从试点走向日常临床

参与人员(4)

完整译文(中文)

Hansard 英文原文译文 · 翻译日期:2026-05-02

[(程序文本) 辩论继续。(程序文本)]

主席:何德仁副教授。

晚上8点12分

社区老年护理

何德仁副教授(提名议员):主席先生,新加坡预计今年将成为超级老龄社会,65岁及以上公民比例达到21%。虽然我们多年来一直在为人口老龄化做准备,但我们需要加快在基础设施、系统和人员方面的努力。我想提出一个建议,那就是建立一个社区基础的护理队伍。

如今,许多新加坡人只有在父母或亲人患病、卧床不起或需要日常生活活动帮助时,才开始学习护理知识和技能。我们应考虑提前大规模培训护理人员,因为大多数成年新加坡人迟早会成为家庭成员的护理者或在家监督护理人员。

达到一定熟练程度的人员可以组成社区护理队伍。患者仅依赖医院或诊所提供注射、伤口护理或物理治疗等基本服务,对国家和个人来说成本都很高。在适当情况下,自我护理和社区支持可以补充机构医疗服务,每个社区内的护理队伍可以发挥作用。

护理队伍提供的服务可以包括基本临床护理、个人护理、治疗、心理社会支持及相关援助,均在明确的护理协议范围内。队伍中可以包括受训支持年长老人的年轻长者。这不仅能让年轻长者保持活跃并参与社区,同时还能赚取一些额外收入。

该项目中的护理人员需要定期更新技能,其能力由医疗机构验证或认证。在线目录或手机应用程序可以帮助居民在社区内找到所需帮助。

我们也应提前扩大对家政助理的培训规模。这将扩大家庭护理能力,减轻正规医疗系统压力,并为助理提供提升就业能力和收入潜力的技能。

社区护理应辅以扩大家庭技术部署,帮助监测老年人的身体和情绪健康,尤其是独居老人。这类工具能让护理人员或小型社区团队跟踪老年人状况,并协调社区护理、清洁和前往综合诊所的交通等服务。

在这方面,我想请问卫生部能否详细说明通过增强家庭个人护理服务及其他项目扩大技术部署的计划。

护理支持行动计划更新

黄志明议员(实龙岗):主席先生,新加坡今年将成为超级老龄社会。65岁时健康的人中,有一半预计在其一生中某个阶段会出现严重残疾。这意味着许多新加坡人迟早会成为护理者。我们的家庭,尤其是中等收入且夹在年轻和老年之间的家庭,将面临越来越大的压力和负担。

晚上8点15分

传统上承担更多护理责任的女性将受到不成比例的影响。我感谢卫生部在护理支持行动计划下为护理者提供更多支持。该计划于2019年启动,在临时照护、补贴水平和家庭护理补助等方面得到加强。此外,通过“安享新加坡”计划,我们将帮助更多老年人在社区中健康老龄化。

我有几点需要澄清,并想就如何在下一阶段更新护理支持行动计划提出一些建议。

首先,中等收入家庭在老年护理服务的可及性、负担能力和质量方面存在哪些关键差距?卫生部有何计划解决这些差距?解决这些问题很重要,以便在职护理者能安心工作,确保亲人得到良好照护。

其次,卫生部是否考虑扩大按收入测试的家庭护理补助,支持更多护理者,包括那些照顾需要一至两项日常生活活动(ADL)协助的家庭成员,目前资格标准为三项ADL?

还有,照顾患有精神健康状况或退行性疾病(如日益普遍的痴呆症)的家庭成员,这些人可能需要高度监督,但目前可能不符合三项ADL标准。

社区预防医疗

杨伟强议员(波东巴西):先生,在去年总统致辞答谢动议辩论中,我曾强调,虽然我们现在寿命更长,但健康寿命平均比总寿命短10年。理想情况下,我们的寿命和健康寿命应更接近。活得长但不健康的担忧是真实存在的。

因此,预防医疗对帮助老年人减少病痛年数、提高退休生活质量至关重要。为此推出了“健康新加坡”计划。但我希望卫生部能做得更多,扩大老年人预防医疗的范围。

我将谈两个与“健康新加坡”计划相关的领域。

首先,根据2023年数据,70岁以上人群中有11%患有痴呆症,16%患有骨质疏松症。随着人口老龄化,预计这些数字会增加。痴呆症对老年人既使人衰弱又令人恐惧。骨骼健康差则导致老年人行动能力和整体健康恶化,尤其是跌倒后。

这两种状况对家庭护理者造成巨大负担。痴呆症前期筛查和骨密度检测可以实现:一、早期发现;二、及时干预,减缓病情进展;三、更好的长期规划,让老年人及其家庭有时间和机会做出必要调整。

我在2025年9月曾提出国会质询,询问卫生部是否计划将痴呆症前期筛查和骨质疏松症纳入“健康新加坡”计划。我很高兴卫生部表示正在制定痴呆症和骨质疏松症的护理协议。

我想请部长更新有关将痴呆症和骨质疏松症护理协议纳入“健康新加坡”计划的进展,包括筛查评估的推出时间表及是否涵盖所有超过某年龄的老年人。

其次,根据2024年健康促进局进行的国家人口健康调查,60至74岁最高龄组中有54.7%最不愿意寻求医疗专业人员帮助,而30至39岁组中有70.9%最愿意寻求帮助。我们的老年人可能面临孤独、悲伤、退休后的失落感以及健康和独立性下降的焦虑。他们也属于可能不常用词汇表达心理健康需求的一代。

在2025年供应委员会辩论中宣布,将推出针对重度抑郁症和广泛性焦虑症的“健康新加坡”护理协议。随着对心理健康的重视增加,我想询问该计划的实施状态和范围,特别是针对老年人,是否会扩展到其他心理疾病。

相关地,我还想请部长考虑为我们的活跃老龄中心团队甚至银发大使提供结构化的基础心理健康急救培训,使他们能成为社区情绪健康的第一响应者。

医生视频通话

阿扎尔·奥斯曼议员(提名议员):去医院常常是令人不愉快的经历,除非是期待新生儿。我想谈谈许多人面临的挑战,包括我自己的经历。众所周知,老年父母去体检时,常常需要子女陪同。这个过程通常包括多项检查,然后与医生咨询下一步措施。

我知道某些医疗机构提供视频咨询。如果允许,我建议我们推广视频通话至所有医院和综合诊所,减少等待时间和简单更新时的医院访问麻烦。虽然我理解某些情况需要面对面咨询,但技术可以显著改善整体体验。利用现有技术,尤其是人工智能,我们可以支持夹心一代,他们既要照顾子女又要照顾年迈父母。

这些护理者常常需要请假去看病,漫长的等待时间有时超过一小时,甚至两三小时,仅为简短的更新令人沮丧。

例如,我儿子足球受伤时,我们也遇到类似情况。等待超过一小时后,医生的更新仅持续五到十分钟。这种交流完全可以通过视频通话高效处理,同时还能实时更新治疗等待时间。

父母参加这些预约所需的时间和精力可能令人不堪重负。我希望卫生部考虑实施类似方案,方便同时照顾年迈父母和幼儿的人士。

临床能力与社会处方

哈雷什·辛加拉朱博士(提名议员):主席先生,我向部长提出两方面建议:加强社会处方和优化临床能力。两者背后有一个观察:我们已建立更好医疗系统的各个部分,包括社会项目、受训专业人员和注册基础设施。我的三个请求是让它们协同工作。

我欢迎社会处方已纳入“健康新加坡”体系,但转诊选项仍较窄,主要涉及活跃老龄中心和体育理事会,而周边生态系统广泛。这限制了与患者需求的匹配,匹配得好,患者才会参与。为实现良好匹配,我们的护理团队需要维护一个实时更新的社区资源目录。

我们不是从零开始。盛港社区医院是世界卫生组织首个社会处方合作中心,拥有训练有素的健康协调员和验证的成果。盛港社区医院与文化、社区及青年部及新加坡土地管理局合作开发的“生活资产地图”实时捕捉社区资源,由一线从业者更新。证据确凿。

部长本人在2023年5月日内瓦表示,60%的健康由社会因素决定,不是在医院,而是在家庭和社区。我的第一个请求基于此:在所有三个医疗集团推广“生活资产地图”,绘制完整生态系统:艺术、文化、遗产、自然、体育、非正式社区伙伴和兴趣团体,并配备资源链接工作人员,弥合最后一公里。

有人担心扩大转诊会压垮社会伙伴。正因如此,我的请求不是开放式泛滥,而是有规划、有维护、有匹配且有资源支持的路径。但路径只有在患者持续使用时才有效。

截至2025年8月,“健康新加坡”已登记超过130万新加坡人,但登记尚未转化为激活。

据我观察,并非所有登记患者都完成了首次健康计划。他们报名了,但未真正参与。登记患者仍可在其他地方寻求护理。有人会问,这不是患者选择吗?确实如此。但连续性不等于排他性。没人失去看其他医生的权利。变化的是默认由一名医生、一支团队了解你。补贴鼓励了第一步,但补贴不是关系。没有激活,患者会流失,只有随着时间显现的社会需求永远不会被发现。

我的第二个请求是激活登记承诺。公布有多少登记患者持续参与,有多少通过随访、筛查和护理团队访问积极参与?我们必须持续学习什么让患者留下。卫生部在“健康新加坡”启动前广泛咨询;请继续保持严谨。并为全科医生和综合诊所提供资源支持。

留住患者需要团队。团队护理是我们系统承诺的方向,医疗集团已建立框架。我们培训了护士、药剂师和辅助医疗专业人员发挥最大能力。但缺乏熟悉感,许多患者选择其他方式,未能受益。实地反馈显示利用率未达预期。如果我们建设能力却未激活,系统付出双重代价:一次培训,一次医生重复工作。随着我们准备注入更多专业人员,做好这点非可选,而是投资回报的前提。

有人说患者对医生的偏好太强,但护理日益复杂,无人能独自应对。这就是我们培训这些专业人员的原因,不是替代医生,而是围绕患者。偏好源于熟悉,但熟悉需要介绍和提醒。这是我请求的国家级努力。

想想航空业。副驾驶受训但尊重机长,机长做所有决定。行业改变默认,实行结构化团队运作。每位专业人员的意见都有分量。事故率下降。同理适用。医疗集团可建框架,但改变公众期望需超越单一集团。

我的第三个请求:领导国家努力,帮助新加坡人理解并信任护士、药剂师和辅助医疗专业人员提供的护理。支持医疗集团确保培训投资转化为护理。

三个请求,各有指标,建立在现有基础上。主席先生,让我展示当三项请求都实现时的情景。

一位老年人在社区诊所登记。因为她留下,她的医生了解她的故事。

数月内,他稳定了她的慢性病。病情稳定后,护士接手,调整药物,指导生活方式和功能保持。护理协调员加强预防护理。她保持健康一年,两年,血压升高。护士调整剂量。再次升高。她错过预约。护理协调员致电并带她回来。再错过。护士警示。情况有变。她这次来了。告诉医生丈夫去年去世,自己自那以后未出门。

医生通过社会处方路径和链接工作人员转介她参加三条街外的园艺小组。她喜欢园艺,去了又去。血压终于稳定。她不需要新方案,只需要一支陪伴她的护理团队和一个对她重要的社区伙伴。让我们建设这样的环境。

晚上8点30分

医疗技术与人工智能

朱佩玲博士(蔡厝港):主席先生,医疗技术常被讨论为速度、规模和创新。但对患者来说,问题更简单:他们能否回家。

在中风康复中,我常遇到患者问一个问题:“我还能独立行走吗?”

他们不是在问算法或处理能力,而是在问尊严和生活能否恢复正常。

随着新加坡成为超级老龄社会,我们面临的问题不是是否采用医疗技术,而是是否以增强独立性、强化劳动力和长期可持续性的方式部署技术。

三个转变将决定技术是变革性的还是渐进性的。

第一,从延长寿命到延长健康寿命。新加坡人寿命延长,但无独立性的长寿给家庭、护理者和系统带来压力。

人工智能辅助影像、基于“健康新加坡”的预测分析、心血管疾病早期风险分层和慢性病远程监测,使我们能在恶化成危机前干预。跌倒风险模型可防止骨折。早期发现可减少严重并发症。预测床位管理可缓解需求压力。

但真正的进步衡量标准不是技术复杂度,而是是否减少老年人失去行动能力,是否减少家庭经历可预防紧急情况,是否更多新加坡人能自信地在家老龄化。

预测越早,干预越早。干预越早,独立性保持越久。这不仅是临床进步,也是老龄国家的社会稳定和财政韧性。

第二,从劳动密集到能力放大。

医疗永远是人的事业,但我们的专业人员今天面临临床复杂性增加,同时行政负担和协调需求也在上升。

生成式人工智能可以协助文档编写。临床决策支持系统能够综合复杂的患者病史。数字分诊工具可以更有效地优先处理风险。在康复方面,传感器引导的治疗系统和经过精心部署的机器人技术,包括为特定患者提供的外骨骼辅助步态训练,可以安全且持续地提高治疗强度,尤其是在早期恢复阶段。这使治疗师能够专注于评估、临床推理和患者参与,而不是重复监督。

技术必须让临床医生节省时间,而不是剥夺专业判断。如果技术能够减少认知过载和不必要的行政摩擦,就能维持士气,保护专业标准,并帮助我们留住系统所依赖的劳动力。一个可持续的医疗系统最终依赖于一个可持续的医疗劳动力。

第三,从处理量到有意义的结果。医疗系统通常以等待时间、床位占用率和利用量来衡量绩效。这些指标对于运营管理非常重要。

但患者衡量成功的标准不同。我能爬楼梯回家吗?我能重返工作岗位吗?我能照顾我的孙辈吗?我能独立生活而不成为家人的负担吗?

随着我们推广人工智能和康复技术,我们应继续将功能性指标——如行动能力、独立性、照护者负担、减少再入院率和重返社区参与度——与利用率指标并列纳入考量。技术应改善患者切身感受到的结果,而不仅仅是我们报告的指标。

主席先生,新加坡的优势从来不是盲目采用新工具,而是在实施上的纪律性。在医疗领域,这种纪律性意味着推广那些能够显著提升独立性、增强专业能力并在超级老龄化社会中保持财政可持续的技术。

随着新加坡人寿命延长,我们的目标必须明确——不仅仅是延长生命年限,更是延长行动能力、自信和参与度的年限。因为归根结底,医疗的目标不是活动本身,而是贯穿生命全周期的尊严。

如果我们明智地部署技术,就能确保新加坡的医疗系统保持先进,不仅如此,还将具有人文关怀、韧性和可持续性。

主席:国务部长拉哈尤。

英文原文

SPRS Hansard 原始记录 · 抓取日期:2026-05-02

[(proc text) Debate resumed. (proc text)]

The Chairman : Assoc Prof Terence Ho.

8.12 pm

Community Caregiving for Seniors

Assoc Prof Terence Ho (Nominated Member) : Mr Chairman, Singapore is expected to become a super-aged society this year as the proportion of citizens aged 65 and above reaches 21%. While we have prepared for an ageing population for many years, we need to accelerate our efforts across infrastructure, systems and people. I would like to offer one suggestion, which is to establish a community-based caregiving corps.

Today, many Singaporeans acquire caregiving knowledge and skills only when their parents or loved ones fall ill, become bedridden or need help with the activities of daily living. We should consider large-scale training of caregivers ahead of time as most adult Singaporeans will at some point become caregivers to family members or supervise caregivers at home.

Those who are trained to a certain proficiency can form a community caregiving corps. It is costly both to the state and individuals for patients to rely only on hospitals or clinics for basic services, such as injections, wound care or physiotherapy. Where appropriate, self-care and community-based support can complement institutional healthcare services, with a caregiving corps within each neighbourhood playing a part.

Services provided by the caregiving corps could include basic clinical care, personal care, therapy, psychosocial support and related assistance within clearly defined care protocols. The corps could include young seniors trained to support older seniors. This would keep younger seniors active and engaged in the community, while at the same time, earning some supplemental income.

Caregivers in this programme would need to periodically refresh their skills, with competencies validated or accredited by healthcare institutions. An online directory or mobile application could help residents find the help they need within their neighbourhood.

We should similarly scale up training for domestic helpers ahead of demand. This would expand caregiving capacity across households, relieve pressure on the formal healthcare system and equip helpers with skills that enhance their employability and earning potential.

Community caregiving should be complemented by scaling up the deployment of technology within homes to help monitor the physical and emotional well-being of seniors, particularly those living alone. Such tools would enable care workers or small neighbourhood teams to keep track of seniors and coordinate services, like community nursing, cleaning and transport to polyclinics.

In this regard I would like to ask if the Ministry could elaborate on plans to scale up technology deployment through the Enhanced Home Personal Care service and other programmes.

Refreshing Caregiver Support Action Plan

Mr Ng Chee Meng (Jalan Kayu) : Chairman, Singapore will become a super-aged society this year. One in two who are healthy at 65 years old, are expected to develop severe disability at some point in their lifetime. This means that many Singaporeans will become caregivers at some point. Our families, especially those who are middle income and sandwiched between young and old, will come under increasing pressure and strain.

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Our women, who traditionally shoulder a more of the caregiving load, will be disproportionately impacted. I thank the Ministry for providing more support for our caregivers under the Caregiver Support Action Plan. Launched in 2019, caregiver support has been enhanced in a few areas, including respite care, subsidy levels and the Home Caregiving Grant. Further, through Age Well Singapore programme, we will help more seniors age well in the community.

I have a few clarifications and would like to provide some suggestions on how we can refresh our Caregiver Support Action Plan in the next bound.

First, what are the critical gaps in accessibility, affordability and quality of eldercare services that our middle-income families continue to face? And what are the Ministry's plans to address these gaps? Addressing these gaps are important, so that working caregivers can continue working with peace of mind that their loved ones are well-cared for.

Second, whether the Ministry will consider expanding the means-tested Home Caregiving Grant to provide more support for more caregivers, including those who care for family members who require assistance with one to two Activities of Daily Living (ADL), below the current eligibility of three ADL today.

Family members who have mental health conditions or degenerative diseases, such as dementia, which is becoming more common, who may require high supervision but may not necessarily qualify for the three ADL criteria today.

Preventive Healthcare in the Community

Mr Alex Yeo (Potong Pasir) : Sir, in my speech during the debate on the Motion of Thanks for the President's Address last year, I had highlighted that, while we now live longer, the years that we live in good health is on average 10 years shorter. Ideally, our life-span and our health-span should be closer. The concern that we live long but not well, is real.

Preventive healthcare is therefore vital to help our seniors reduce years of bad health and increase their quality of life in retirement. The Healthier SG Programme was launched to address this. However, I wish to advocate for the Ministry to do more and expand the range of preventative healthcare for our seniors.

I will address two areas related to the Healthier SG Programme.

First, based on 2023 data, 11% of those above the age of 70 have dementia and 16% above the age of 70 have osteoporosis. We can expect the numbers to have increased and continue to increase in our ageing society. Dementia is both debilitating and scary for seniors. Poor bone health on the other hand, leads to deteriorating mobility and overall health in seniors, especially after a fall.

Both conditions take a tremendous toll on caregivers in the family. Pre-dementia screening and Bone Density Tests allow for: one, early detection; two, timely intervention which can slow down the progression; and three, better long-term planning, which gives our seniors and their families the time and opportunity to make necessary adjustments.

I had asked a Parliamentary Question in September 2025 on whether the Ministry had plans to include as part of the Healthier SG Programme, screenings for pre-dementia and osteoporosis. I was heartened when the Ministry had indicated that Care Protocols for Dementia and Osteoporosis were being developed under Healthier SG.

I would like to seek an update from the Minister on the progress in including Care Protocols for Dementia and Osteoporosis under the Healthier SG Programme, including the timelines of the roll-out of the screening assessments and whether they will cover all seniors above a certain age.

Second, according to the National Population Health Survey 2024 conducted by the Health Promotion Board, 54.7% of Singapore residents in the oldest age band, 60 to 74 years, were least willing to seek help from healthcare professionals, while 70.9% of those aged 30 to 39 were the most willing to do so. Our seniors can face loneliness, grief, loss of purpose after retirement and the anxiety of declining health and independence. They also belong to a generation that may not often have the vocabulary to convey their mental well-being needs.

In the Committee of Supply 2025 debates, it was announced at that Healthier SG care protocols for major depressive disorder and general anxiety disorder would be rolled out. With the increased emphasis on mental wellness, I would like to enquire on the status and ambit of this roll-out, particularly for our seniors and whether it would expand to other mental ailments.

Relatedly, I would also like to ask the Minister if he can provide our Active Ageing Centre Teams or even our Silver Generation Ambassadors, structured training in basic mental health first aid, so they can be first responders for emotional well-being in the community.

Video Calls with Doctors

Mr Azhar Othman (Nominated Member) : Visiting hospitals can often be an unpleasant experience, unless one is expecting a newborn. I want to address the challenges faced by many individuals, including my own experiences. As many are aware, when our elderly parents go for check-ups, they often require the assistance of their children. This process typically involves several tests, followed by consultation with a doctor regarding the next steps.

I am aware that certain medical institutions offer video consultations. If I may propose that we utilise video calls to all hospitals and polyclinics and minimise waiting times and the hassle of hospital visits for simple updates. While I understand that some situations necessitate in person consultation, technology can significantly enhance the overall experience. By leveraging available technology, and now with AI, we can support especially the sandwich generation who juggle responsibilities for both their children and ageing parents.

These caregivers often need to take time off from work for medical appointments and the lengthy waits sometimes over an hour; even two or three hours for brief updates can be frustrating.

For instance, when my son had a football injury, we faced a similar situation. After waiting for over an hour, the doctor's update lasted for only for five to 10 minutes. Such interaction could be efficiently handled through video calls, which would also allow for real time updates on waiting times for treatments.

The time and energy required for parents to attend these appointments can be overwhelming. I hope the Ministry considers implementing solution that facilitate a similar experience for those caring for both elderly parents and young children.

Clinical Capacity and Social Prescribing

Dr Haresh Singaraju (Nominated Member) : Mr Chairman, I address the Minister on two fronts: strengthening social prescribing and optimising clinical capacity. Beneath both lies one observation. We have built the parts of a better healthcare system, including social programmes, trained professionals and enrolment infrastructure. My three asks are about making them work together.

I welcome that social prescribing is already part of our system under Healthier SG, but the referral options remain narrow, largely involving Active Ageing Centres and Sports SG, while the ecosystem around is wide. This limits the match to what matters to the patient and when we match well, they go. To match well, our care teams need a maintained real time directory of what exists in each neighbourhood.

We are not starting from scratch. SingHealth Community Hospitals are the world's first World Health Organization Collaborating Centre for Social Prescribing with trained well being coordinators and proven outcomes. The Living Asset Map developed by SingHealth Community Hospitals with the Ministry of Culture, Community and Youth and Singapore Land Authority already captures community assets in real time, updated by practitioners on the ground. The evidence is there.

The Minister himself said in Geneva in May 2023, that 60% of health is socially determined, not in hospitals, but in homes and in communities. My first ask follows from his words: scale the Living Asset Map across all three clusters. Map the full ecosystem: arts, culture, heritage, nature, sports, informal community partners and interest groups and resource link workers to close the last mile.

Some may worry that widening referrals could overwhelm social partners. That is precisely why the ask is not an open floodgate, but a mapped, maintained and matched pathway resourced to sustain. But a pathway only works if patients stay long enough to use it.

Healthier SG has enrolled over 1.3 million Singaporeans as of August 2025, but enrolment is not yet activation.

From what I see in practice, not all enrolled patients have completed even a first health plan. They have signed up, but never sat down. Enrolled patients can still seek care elsewhere. Some will ask, is this not about patient choice? It is. But continuity is not exclusivity. No one loses the right to see another doctor. What changes is the default that one doctor, one team knows you. Subsidies encouraged the first step, but a subsidy is not a relationship. Without activation, patients drift and the social needs that only surface over time never do.

My second ask activate what enrolment promises. Publish how many enrolled patients stay and how many actively engaged through follow-ups, screenings and care team visits? We must continuously learn what make patients stay. The Ministry consulted widely before Healthier SG launched; continue that rigour. And resource are providers GPs and polyclinics alike to keep them.

Keeping them takes a team. Team-based care is the direction our system has committed to, our clusters have built the frameworks. We have trained nurses, pharmacists and allied health professionals to practise at the top of licence. But without familiarity, many patients choose otherwise and never benefit. What we hear on the ground suggests utilisation is not where it should be. If we build capacity and fail to activate it, the system pays twice: once to train; once when the doctor does the same work. As we prepare to inject more professionals into the system, getting this right is not optional. It is the condition for that investment to pay off.

Some will say patient preference for doctors is too strong, but care is growing more complex and no single pair of hands can manage it alone. That is why we have trained these professionals in the first place, not to replace the doctor, but to surround the patient. Preference follows familiarity, but familiarity requires introductions and reminders. That is the national effort I asked for.

Think of aviation. Co-pilots were trained, but deferential. The captain made every call. The industry changed the default to structured team functioning. Every professional's input carried weight. Accident rates fell. The same principle applies. The clusters can build the frameworks, but shifting public expectation requires more than any single cluster can do alone.

My third ask: lead that national effort to help Singaporeans understand and trust the care that nurses, pharmacists and allied health professionals provide. Support the clusters in ensuring investment in training translates into care.

Three asks each with a metric, each building on what already exists. Mr Chairman, let me show you what this looks like when all three asks work.

A senior enrols at her neighbourhood clinic. Because she stays, her doctor learns her story.

Over months, he stabilises her chronic conditions. Once stable, her nurse takes over, adjusting medications, coaching on lifestyle and function preservation. Her care coordinator tightens preventive care. She remains well for a year, then two, then her blood pressure climbs. The nurse titrates. It climbs again. She misses an appointment. The care coordinator calls and brings her back. She misses another. The nurse flags it. Something else is going on. She comes in this time. She tells the doctor that her husband died last year. She has not left the flat since.

He refers her through the social prescribing pathway and a link worker to a gardening group three blocks away. She liked gardening. She goes and she goes again. Her blood pressure finally holds. She did not need a new programme. She needed a care team alongside her and a community partner that mattered to her. Let us build that environment.

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Technology and AI in Healthcare

Dr Choo Pei Ling (Chua Chu Kang) : Mr Chairman, in healthcare, technology is often discussed in terms of speed, scale and innovation. But for patients, it is much simpler. It is about whether they can return home.

In stroke rehabilitation, I often meet patients who ask a single question, "Will I be able to walk independently again?"

They are not asking about algorithms or processing power. They are asking about dignity and whether their lives can resume some sense of normalcy.

As Singapore becomes a super-aged society, the question before us is not whether we embrace technology in healthcare. The question is whether we deploy it in ways that strengthen independence, reinforce our workforce and preserve sustainability in the long term.

Three shifts will determine whether technology becomes transformational or merely incremental.

First, from extending lifespan to extending healthspan. Singaporeans are living longer, but longevity without independence places strain on families, caregivers and the system itself.

AI-assisted imaging, predictive analytics under Healthier SG, earlier risk stratification for cardiovascular disease and remote monitoring of chronic conditions allow us to intervene before deterioration becomes crisis. Fall-risk modelling can prevent fractures. Early detection can reduce severe complications. Predictive bed management can smooth demand pressures.

But the true measure of progress is not technological sophistication. It is whether fewer seniors lose mobility, whether fewer families experience preventable emergencies, whether more Singaporeans can age confidently in their own homes.

When we predict earlier, we intervene earlier. When we intervene earlier, we preserve independence longer. That is not only clinical progress. It is social stability and fiscal resilience in an ageing nation.

Second, from labour intensity to capability amplification.

Healthcare will always be human, but our professionals today face rising clinical complexity alongside administrative burden and coordination demands.

Generative AI can assist with documentation. Clinical decision-support systems can synthesise complex patient histories. Digital triage tools can prioritise risk more effectively. In rehabilitation, sensor-guided therapy systems and carefully deployed robotic technologies, including exoskeleton-assisted gait training for selected patients, can increase therapy intensity safely and consistently, particularly in early recovery. This allows therapists to focus on assessment, clinical reasoning and patient engagement rather than repetitive supervision.

Technology must give clinicians back time, not take professional judgement away. If technology reduces cognitive overload and unnecessary administrative friction, it sustains morale, protects professional standards and helps us retain the workforce our system depends on. A sustainable healthcare system ultimately depends on a sustainable healthcare workforce.

Third, from throughput to meaningful outcomes. Healthcare systems often measure performance in terms of waiting times, bed occupancy and utilisation volumes. These indicators are important for operational management.

But patients measure success differently. Can I climb the stairs to my flat? Can I return to work? Can I care for my grandchildren? Can I live independently without becoming a burden to my family?

As we scale AI and rehabilitation technologies, we should continue embedding functional indicators – mobility, independence, caregiver burden, re-admission reduction and return-to-community participation – alongside utilisation metrics. Technology should improve outcomes that patients feel, not just metrics we report.

Mr Chairman, Singapore's strength has never been blind adoption of new tools. It has been discipline in the implementation. In healthcare, that discipline means scaling technologies that demonstrably improve independence, strengthen professional capability and remain financially sustainable in a super-aged society.

As Singaporeans live longer, our ambition must be clear – not merely to extend years of life, but to extend years of mobility, confidence and participation. Because ultimately, the goal of healthcare is not activity, it is dignity across the life cycle.

If we deploy technology wisely, we will ensure that Singapore's healthcare system remains advanced and not only that, but also humane, resilient and sustainable.

The Chairman : Minister of State Rahayu.