RIYADH: The Saudi Ministry of Health is forecast to spend $18.5 billion on healthcare every year for the next decade, with a focus on digitalizing the sector and adopting modern, even futuristic, processes to increase the life expectancy of Saudi citizens.

As part of the Vision 2030 program, two big healthcare targets have been set for 2025: For 88 percent of the population, including those in rural areas, to have access to inclusive health services, and for 100 percent of the population to be covered by a unified digital medical records system.

Work toward achieving targets is already underway and a prime example is Riyadh’s King Saud Medical City (KSMC), the oldest medical city in the Kingdom, which was founded in 1956 and currently boasts 1,400 beds and around 8,000 employees. In 2018, KSMC started the process to digitize its services and processes.

Social distancing restrictions and limitations on travel last year helped to accelerate the changes.

“During the pandemic you saw an increase in the virtualization of services — there is no need (for patients) to come for a regular visit,” Mohammed Saud Alhassan, director of E-Health Administration at KSMC, told Arab News.

“You have the choice as a patient of a virtual or physical clinic, based on the doctor’s opinion. So, most of the patients, especially in the outpatient clinic for just a regular checkup, there was no need for the patient to come into the facility itself so they can be seen virtually and given instructions by the doctor,” he added.

During the pandemic, emergency cases were still seen in the hospital. But in a bid to reduce face-to-face interactions, if treatments could be done virtually then they were. With the systems now in place, KSMC is planning to ramp up its usage. Alhassan said the hospital’s doctors are currently seeing around 400 patients virtually, but by the fourth quarter of this year he hopes to see this increase to 2,500 per week.

Back in 2018 when they began the digitalization plan, Alhassan said they believed it was going to take around three to four years to change the workflow system, but they have managed to achieve what they wanted in around a year.

“Yes (COVID-19) has been a gift for us. It has been a strong signal to look for the next generation of systems to help us optimize our resources,” he said.

The Kingdom’s investments in healthcare are already seeing results in recent years, as according to the Vision 2030 website, the average life expectancy of Saudi citizens rising from 72.6 years in 2000 to 75 in 2018.

As part of the process, KSMC developed a digital application for patients and staff. One of the key steps in the process was digitalizing patient health data, which was previously all done using paper documents in files and updated manually.

HIGHLIGHTS

• In 2018, KSMC started the process to digitize its services and processes.

• Social distancing restrictions and limitations on travel last year helped to accelerate the changes.

• The hospital’s doctors are currently seeing around 400 patients virtually.

Rodrigo Castelo, vice president Middle East and Africa at US-based software development company OutSystems, who partnered with KSMC to manage the upgrading of the systems, said this switch from paper to screen required a lot of investment in staff training.

“To roll out such a change to digital you need to make sure usability is not complicated, as you have admin staff who might not even have an education degree of any type and then you have the doctors. So, the same system needs to be used by a diverse pool of resources, and needs to be simple and appealing. It is not a simple change,” he explained.

Castelo said the move toward digitalization was already in place before the pandemic, but it has seen demand for its services in Saudi Arabia soar dramatically.

“The Saudi market is growing a lot and very fast. In the region, we have been growing between 80 and 100 percent year-on-year. Saudi Arabia has been growing faster at the moment, I would say even more than the UAE,” he added. KSMC is only the start of the evolution in the healthcare sector. Saudi Arabia’s NEOM megaproject is looking to completely change how healthcare is provided, using smart toothbrushes and artificial intelligence to flag up potential health problems, using a virtual health assistant — or “digital twin” — to monitor biometrics every day.

The Kingdom’s sovereign wealth fund has also invested $400 million in Magic Leap, a US augmented reality startup. The Florida-based tech firm’s headsets are already being used in the medical industry, where doctors on different sides of the world can take part in procedures, reducing the geographical limitations on what can be accomplished.

“Let us say it is brain surgery,” CEO Peggy Johnson told Arab News. “They may be in the midst of things and they have a question and they really want to talk to somebody who has done maybe a number of these surgeries. You can actually do that with the device. You can make a call to a remote expert and they can see what that surgeon is seeing and talk them through assistance.”

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