All Saudi Arabia should have access to AI health monitoring technology, says Prince Khaled Bin Alwayseed
Riyadh: All Saudi Arabia should have access to artificial intelligence technology that monitors health in real time.
“All Saudi citizens need a real-time, AI-driven health dashboard that tracks metabolic markers, predicted disease risks and lifestyle optimization strategies,” said KBW Ventures founder and CEO of Riyadh. He said he is on the sidelines of the Global Health Span Summit. Arab News as a Media Partner.
“We can also encourage R&D with a focus on longevity. Governments should deal with health technology startups, just like they do with defense contractors. Fund them, track them quickly, and breakthroughs. We need to achieve this.”
The prince and investors spoke about the idea of extending healthy life expectancy for the Saudi Arabian population, a key focus of the two-day summit.
“Aging is not the onset of illness. Medicine has failed to treat the underlying cause. We believe that heart disease, Alzheimer’s disease, and metabolic disorders are just part of “age.” It has been conditioned to It’s like saying that it’s inevitable that a car broke after 100,000 miles. Not that; mechanical failure due to wear and tear. “
Furthermore, financial stress on the economy is not from people who live longer, but from people who live longer, not from those who live longer.
“The health care system is designed to treat illnesses rather than prevent it. Instead of investing in technology to keep people healthy for longer, we have spent trillions on terminal care. The longer people are active, productive and self-sufficient, the better it will be for the economy,” he said.
According to Prince Khaled, a healthy population is not a burden, but an economic accelerator.
He continued. Bounce healthcare from expenses to investment. “
The problem, he said, is the government and legacy institutions that treat healthcare as a expense instead of the growth sector.
But to change this perspective, he added, life expectancy should be a national priority, just as life expectancy should be invested in new technology to extend healthy life expectancy.
“Just as governments invest in infrastructure and energy security, we should fund longevity technology, AI-driven medicine and regenerative therapy,” Prince Khalid said.
He added: “Preventive care needs to be overhauled. Go from the “Illness” model to “Treatment” model to “Predict and prevent the model.”
Another idea raised by the CEO was to use Saudi Arabia as a biotech corridor.
Saudi Arabia could be presented to the world as a global hub for longevity research, “providing regulatory flexibility, AI-driven clinical trials, and public-private partnerships that drive biotechnology innovation faster.” he said.
A healthier population will encourage productivity, innovation and economic expansion, as ever.
Furthermore, the future of health is maintained not only by hospitals, but by algorithms. Prince Khaled, with advanced technology, AI designs a personalized longevity plan for every individual by detecting disease before symptoms appear.
“AI is not going to replace doctors. We have all citizens as CEOs of their health. We need to run simulations of all human bodies and predict health outcomes before they occur. Data There is. You need AI to understand that,” he said.
While the country develops and moves forward with many megaprojects, CEOs believe that governments can build the world’s first city with a longevity first. The effects of aging.
“AI-led biotechnology allows the kingdom to lead regenerative medicine, gene editing and age-reversal therapy. A 100-year lifespan should not be a burden. That should be an advantage,” he says. Ta.
“The future of Saudi Arabia’s health is not about more hospitals and doctors. It’s about AI-driven longevity, aggressive medicine and ensuring that all Saudi Arabia live longer and healthier.”
When aging is considered an irresolvable problem, it does, Prince Khaled said. However, it can be solved if it is treated as an engineering issue.
In his final note, Prince Khaled states: “A country that prioritizes lifespan will control the global economy.”