MDDI 演讲稿 · 2026-05-19
MOS Rahayu Mahzam在「AI in Health x ATxSummit」的开幕致辞
MOS Rahayu Mahzam在「AI in Health x ATxSummit」的开幕致辞
要点
- • 新加坡将在2030年首次迎来老年人口超越儿童的局面,四分之一的新加坡人将年满65岁或以上,这促使医疗体系通过「更健康的新加坡」等举措向上游预防转变。
- • 新加坡中央医院与A*STAR诊断发展中心的合作推动了三项创新:体外抗生素组合测试(iACT)以应对抗菌素耐药性、PENSIEVE-AI用于检测老年人早期记忆问题,以及HealthVector Diabetes用于估测2型糖尿病患者的慢性肾脏病风险。
- • 新加坡卫生集团开发了S.C.O.R.E.框架——评估安全性、背景与共识、客观性、可重复性和可解释性——以评估临床环境中的大型语言模型输出和AI生成回复。
- • 新加坡卫生集团与不丹皇家大学格雅尔波宗信息技术学院合作开发一个用不丹数据训练的AI辅助胸部X光模型以诊断农村医院的肺部疾病,同时共同制定针对不丹情境的指南、教育计划和监管框架。
- • 医疗保健被列为新加坡的国家AI使命之一,由包括「AI医疗指南」(AIHGle)和「模型AI治理框架」在内的政府指南支持,以确保AI的安全和负责任部署。
完整译文(中文)
MDDI 英文原文译文 · 翻译日期: 2026-05-22
新闻室开幕演讲 MOS 哈妮亚·玛哈扎姆在「AI in Health x ATxSummit」演讲 开幕演讲 MOS 哈妮亚·玛哈扎姆在「AI in Health x ATxSummit」2026年5月19日
不丹格列普治正念城州长Dasho博士洛泰·谢林,
尊敬的嘉宾、主持人、代表、合作伙伴和朋友们。
早上好。
当今医疗保健格局处于两大关键现实的交汇点:人口迅速老龄化和人工智能的变革潜力。我们如何应对这一交汇点将决定我们不仅能否管理明天的医疗保健挑战,还能否塑造子孙后代的健康和福祉。
今天的会议主题「从智慧国家到蓝色区域国家」明确了方向。在过去的几十年里,新加坡建立了强大的数字基础设施:综合医疗IT系统、数据基础设施和深厚的机构信任。这些基础设施使我们能够推动医疗保健部门的人工智能转型。
蓝色区域的概念对这个房间里许多人来说会很熟悉。在日本冲绳、意大利撒丁岛和哥斯达黎加尼科亚等蓝色区域,社区居民通常活到90岁以上。它们的共同之处不在于先进的医疗技术,而是更简单的东西:使良好健康成为自然结果的生活方式。
到2030年,新加坡老年人的数量将首次超过儿童。四分之一的新加坡人年龄在65岁或以上。在短短几十年内,我们增加了寿命。现在更艰难的任务是为这些年增加生活质量。
新加坡有难得的机会来有意识地决定我们如何做到这一点。我们可以使用数据在健康模式成为疾病负担之前检测它们。我们可以部署人工智能来发现人眼遗漏的东西,而不是等待患者出现在诊所。我们可以在「更健康的新加坡」已经开始的基础上继续推进:将我们的医疗保健系统向上游转变,走向预防和社区护理,通过有针对性的措施鼓励人们保持健康,在他们需要就医之前。毕竟,良好的健康是我们可以每天建立的东西。
让我有信心新加坡可以走上建设更健康社区之路的是你们今天聚集在这里的每一个人。在我们中间,有理解人体细胞水平发生了什么的研究人员,有知道患者如何从裂缝中掉下来是什么样子的临床医生,有建造工具的技术人员,有必须使系统为每个人工作的政策制定者,以及理解没有可持续经济学就无法扩大规模的行业领导者。你们代表了完整的链条,从发现到交付。
今天的对话将刻意追踪这条链条,从人工智能教会我们关于我们如何老化的内容,到我们如何将这些发现从实验室和试验基地带入医院、社区和家庭,以及我们如何通过正确的经济学使好主意扩展到规模。我很高兴这个峰会汇聚了工业、学术界以及法律和监管界来解决这些重要问题,因为多样的观点帮助我们在科学上可能的事物和对患者和社区有实际意义的事物之间建立桥梁。
我们今天也在这里见证两份谅解备忘录的签署。第一份是新加坡综合医院与A*STAR诊断发展中心之间的合作。这一伙伴关系旨在将有前景的研究转化为对患者的真实影响,迄今为止已支持三项创新。
首先,体外抗生素组合测试(iACT)是一种帮助医生为患者选择正确的抗生素组合的工具,同时解决抗菌素耐药性日益增长的威胁。
其次,PENSIEVE-AI是一个数字绘画应用程序,可以发现老年人早期的记忆问题。
第三,HealthVector糖尿病是世界上第一个人类生物学的数字孪生模型,可以估计II型糖尿病患者慢性肾脏病的风险。糖尿病是新加坡最紧迫的公共健康挑战之一。由于肾功能衰竭、失明和截肢等并发症,糖尿病对患者来说是毁灭性的,给我们的医疗保健系统造成负担。一个可以帮助识别高危人群以便早期干预的人工智能工具不仅仅是一项研究成就。它是对我们人口最紧迫的健康需求之一的直接回应。
第二份谅解备忘录是新加坡卫生集团与不丹皇家大学格列普治信息技术学院(GCIT)之间的合作,涉及我深感在意的一个问题——我们在这里所做的工作不应该止于国界。新加坡长期以来一直是地区卫生中心和知识伙伴,这一伙伴关系是对这一承诺的表达。我特别感到欣慰的是,去年的ATx上,我们讨论的是一个仍在开发中的模式,而今天,我们看到它在我们国境以外扎根。
新加坡卫生集团和GCIT团队正在开发一个专门使用不丹数据训练的人工智能辅助胸部放射线照相模型,以支持诊断肺部疾病,如农村医院的感染和癌症。该模型建立在MerMED-FM之上,该模型由新加坡卫生集团和A*STAR共同开发。这项工作证明了当临床专业知识和技术能力与共同目的结合在一起时会发生什么。
除了临床工具外,两个机构还将共同开发关于医疗保健中负责任的人工智能使用的指南、教育计划和监管框架,针对不丹的背景进行定制。通过与不丹独特的医疗保健环境的互动,我们加强了我们对亚洲地区的认识以及我们的模型能做什么。
这两份谅解备忘录提醒我们,当峰会结束时工作并未结束;对话打开了大门,但承诺是推动我们前进的动力。
当我们从愿景走向行动时,我想呼应三个智慧国家目标——信任、增长和社区。
在人工智能和医疗保健中的信任是患者安全的基础。随着人工智能在我们的医疗保健部门中开始发挥更活跃的作用,我们必须继续严格评估和监管其使用。这就是为什么我很高兴新加坡卫生集团开发了S.C.O.R.E.框架「安全、背景和共识、客观性、可重现性和可解释性」来评估临床环境中的大型语言模型输出和人工智能生成的响应。
S.C.O.R.E.已在运用。新加坡卫生集团的临床团队已将其应用于评估支持患者护理交付的人工智能工具,从药物咨询聊天机器人到在咨询期间协助专家的人工智能系统,确保人工智能响应安全、准确且易于理解。在临床决策支持中,它被用于在部署前验证模型输出,并指导为不同临床背景选择最合适的模型。新加坡政府已经文化化了指导方针,如「医疗保健人工智能指南(AIHGle)」指导医疗保健中人工智能的安全和负责任的部署,以及「模型人工智能治理框架」。这些努力有助于建立我们可信的人工智能采用生态系统。
关于增长,人工智能有可能改变诊断的可能性,并为临床医生提供更好的工具。但实现这一潜力取决于我们能否很好地跨越两个世界。我们需要临床医生对人工智能的理解足够深入,能够向其提出更好的问题,识别它不足的地方,并确保它在床边被适当应用。我们还需要人工智能研究人员对临床护理的理解足够深入,以建立工具——不仅仅是技术上令人印象深刻的工具——而是那些解决现实情况和适合护理交付方式的工具。将临床专业知识与技术能力相结合,以道德和负责任的方式应用,才能将有前景的技术转化为患者更好的结果。
然后是社区。我们试图解决的问题太复杂了,利害关系太高了,任何单一社区都无法独自解决。我们需要临床医生、科学家、技术人员、政策制定者、行业领导者和患者倡导者聚集在一起,这个峰会是一个很好的开始平台。
当涉及医疗保健中的人工智能时,我们处于非常有利的位置——我们有一个强大的医疗保健系统、合适的人才和稳健的治理。医疗保健是我们国家人工智能使命之一,人工智能在医疗保健中创造更大影响的潜力很大——改进临床决策和医疗保健交付,帮助人们活得更长久、活得更充实。我期待通过医疗保健中的人工智能我们能取得更多成就。
我感谢新加坡卫生集团人工智能办公室汇聚了众多杰出的临床医生、研究人员、技术人员和政策制定者,他们都拥有强大的信念,即人工智能可以而且应该服务于人类健康。
在这一点上,我很高兴宣布ATx峰会关于「从智慧国家到蓝色区域国家」的会议正式开幕。谢谢。
英文原文
MDDI 官网原始记录 · 抓取日期: 2026-05-22
Newsroom Opening Speech by MOS Rahayu Mahzam at the AI in Health x ATxSummit Speeches Opening Speech by MOS Rahayu Mahzam at the AI in Health x ATxSummit 19 May 2026
Dasho Dr Lotay Tshering, Governor of Gelephu Mindfulness City, Bhutan,
Distinguished panellists, moderators, delegates, partners, and friends.
Good morning.
The healthcare landscape today stands at the intersection of two defining realities: a rapidly ageing population, and the transformative potential of artificial intelligence. How we navigate this intersection will enable us to not only manage the healthcare challenges of tomorrow but also shape the health and wellbeing of generations to come.
The theme for today’s session, "Smart Nation to Blue Zone Nation", sets a clear direction. Over the past decades, Singapore has built strong digital foundations: comprehensive healthcare IT systems, data infrastructure, and deep institutional trust. These foundations have enabled us to drive AI transformation in our healthcare sector.
The concept of a Blue Zone will be familiar to many in this room. In Blue Zones like Okinawa in Japan, Sardinia in Italy, and Nicoya in Costa Rica, communities routinely live well beyond 90 years old. What they share is not advanced medical technology, but something simpler: ways of living that make good health the natural outcome.
By 2030, Singapore will have more seniors than children for the first time in our history. One in four Singaporeans will be aged 65 or older. In just a few decades, we have added years to life. The harder task now is to add life to those years.
Singapore has the rare opportunity to be deliberate about how we do that. We can use data to detect health patterns before they become disease burdens. We can deploy AI to catch what the human eye misses, rather than wait for patients to show up at the clinics. And we can build on what Healthier SG has begun: shifting our healthcare system upstream, towards prevention and community care, encouraging people to stay healthy through targeted measures before they ever need to seek care. After all, good health is something we can build up every day.
What gives me confidence that Singapore can chart this path towards building healthier communities is all of you gathered here today. Amongst us, researchers who understand what is happening at the cellular level of the human body, clinicians who know what it looks like when a patient falls through the cracks, technologists building the tools, policymakers who must make the system work for everyone, and industry leaders who understand that none of this reaches scale without sustainable economics. You represent the full chain, from discovery to delivery.
The conversations today will trace that chain deliberately, from what AI is teaching us about how we age, to how we bring these discoveries from laboratories and test beds to hospitals, communities and homes, and how we can make good ideas scale with the right economics. I am glad this Summit has brought the industry, academia, and the legal and regulatory communities together to tackle these important questions, because diverse perspectives help us bridge what is scientifically possible with what is practically meaningful for patients and communities.
We are also here to witness the signing of two MOUs today. The first is between Singapore General Hospital and A*STAR’s Diagnostics Development Hub. This partnership aims to translate promising research into real impact for patients and has supported three innovations so far.
First, the in-vitro Antibiotic Combination Test (iACT), a tool that helps doctors choose the right antibiotic combination for patients, while addressing the growing threat of antimicrobial resistance.
Second, PENSIEVE-AI, a digital drawing application that spots early memory problems in seniors.
Third, HealthVector Diabetes, which is the world’s first digital twin model of human biology that can estimate the risk of chronic kidney disease in people with type 2 diabetes. Diabetes is one of Singapore's most pressing public health challenges. With complications like kidney failure, blindness, and amputation, diabetes is devastating for patients and strains our healthcare system. An AI tool that can help to identify high-risk individuals for early intervention is not just a research achievement. It is a direct response to one of the most urgent health needs of our population.
The second MOU, between SingHealth and Gyalpozhing College of Information Technology (GCIT), Royal University of Bhutan speaks to something I feel strongly about – that the work we do here should not stop at our borders. Singapore has long played a role as a regional health hub and knowledge partner, and this partnership is an expression of that commitment. I am especially heartened that at last year's ATx, we were speaking about a model still in development, and today, we see it find its footing beyond our shores.
Together, the SingHealth and GCIT teams are developing an AI-assisted chest radiograph model trained specifically on Bhutanese data, to support the diagnosis of lung diseases like infections and cancer in rural hospitals. The model is built on MerMED-FM, which is co-developed by SingHealth and A*STAR. This work is a testament to what becomes possible when clinical expertise and technical capability are brought together with a shared purpose.
Alongside the clinical tool, both institutions will co-develop guidelines, educational programmes, and regulatory frameworks on responsible AI use in healthcare, tailored to Bhutan's context. From engaging with Bhutan’s unique healthcare setting, we strengthen what we know and what our models can do across the Asian region.
Both MOUs are a reminder that the work does not end when the Summit does; conversations open doors, but commitments are what move us forward.
As we move from vision to action, I want to echo the three Smart Nation goals – Trust, Growth, and Community.
Trust, in AI and healthcare, is the foundation for patient safety. As AI starts to play a more active role in our healthcare sector, we must continue to be rigorous about assessing and governing its use. This is why I am glad that SingHealth has developed the S.C.O.R.E. framework “Safety, Context & Consensus, Objectivity, Reproducibility, and Explainability” for evaluating large language model outputs and AI generated responses in clinical settings.
S.C.O.R.E. is already at work. Clinical teams across SingHealth have applied it to evaluate AI tools that support patient care delivery, from medication enquiry chatbots to AI systems that assist specialists during consultations, ensuring that AI responses are safe, accurate, and easy to understand. In clinical decision support, it has been used to validate model outputs before deployment, and to guide the selection of the most suitable models for different clinical contexts. The Singapore Government has contextualised guidance such as the AI in Healthcare Guidelines (AIHGle) that guides safe and responsible deployment of AI in healthcare, and the Model AI Governance Frameworks. These efforts help build up our trusted ecosystem for AI adoption.
On Growth, AI has the potential to transform what is diagnostically possible and equip clinicians with better tools. But realising that potential depends on how well we bridge two worlds. We need clinicians who understand AI well enough to ask better questions of it, identify where it falls short, and ensure it is applied appropriately at the bedside. And we need AI researchers who understand clinical care well enough to build tools – not just technically impressive ones – but those that address the realities and fit into how care is delivered. It is the combination of clinical expertise with technical capability, applied ethically and responsibly, that turns promising technology into better outcomes for patients.
And then there is Community. The problems we are trying to solve are too complex, with stakes that are too high for any community to tackle alone. We need clinicians, scientists, technologists, policymakers, industry leaders, and patient advocates to come together, and this Summit is a great platform to start.
When it comes to AI in healthcare, we are starting from a very good position – we have a strong healthcare system, the right talent, and sound governance. Healthcare is one of our national AI Missions, and there is so much potential for AI to create greater impact in healthcare – to improve clinical decision-making and healthcare delivery and helping people to live longer and live well. I look forward to what more we can achieve through AI for healthcare.
I thank the SingHealth AI Office for bringing together a remarkable gathering of clinicians, researchers, technologists, and policymakers, all united by a strong conviction that AI can and should serve human health.
On that note, it is my pleasure to declare the ATx Summit session on Smart Nation to Blue Zone Nation officially open. Thank you.