Microsoft has published a source feature presenting seven examples of how AI is being used in healthcare and well-being settings in different countries.
The piece frames the examples around pressures on health systems facing tight budgets, rising demand, and growing administrative workloads, and says AI tools are being deployed to reduce documentation burdens, improve information flows, and support working conditions for clinicians and pharmacists.
According to the feature, one example comes from the Munich Fire Department, where an AI operator is being tested to handle non-emergency patient transport calls while handing cases to human staff when needed. Microsoft says the system is intended to free dispatchers to focus on life-threatening emergencies and is currently in beta testing at LMU Klinikum in Munich.
The article also points to the use of ambient clinical documentation technology in the United Kingdom. At Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust, Microsoft says clinicians are using Dragon Copilot to turn clinical conversations into structured medical notes, aiming to reduce paperwork and increase time with patients. The feature cites hospital estimates that the time savings could allow treatment of up to a quarter of a million additional patients each year.
In Kenya, Microsoft highlights an AI-powered app called Zendawa used by independent pharmacies to track inventory, reduce waste, and support business planning. The feature says the app helps forecast stock needs and uses sales data to support loan applications.
Another example comes from Spain, where Microsoft says DxGPT, a diagnostic support tool built on Microsoft Azure, is being used to help identify rare diseases more quickly. The feature links the tool to Foundation 29 and states that it is already integrated into Madrid’s public health system and is expanding to two additional Spanish regions.
Microsoft also points to clinician burnout and documentation pressures in the United States. At Intermountain Health, the article says Dragon Copilot has been integrated into electronic health records and rolled out to more than 2,500 clinicians, with the organisation reporting faster documentation, lower cognitive load, and improved clinician satisfaction and patient engagement.
Cybersecurity recovery is another theme in the feature. Microsoft says Osaka General Medical Center in Japan adopted Microsoft security and cloud tools after a 2022 ransomware attack that disrupted access to servers, patient data, and internal communications. The article presents the case as a broader hospital security reset rather than only a clinical AI deployment example.
A final example focuses on Ribera, a private hospital operator active in Spain, Portugal, and Central Europe. Microsoft says Ribera uses a mix of AI and digital tools to monitor chronic patients, predict risks such as pressure ulcers and falls, and test generative AI for discharge letters in routine procedures, with the stated aim of redirecting clinician time back to patient care.
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