Through this agreement, WHO and I-DAIR will work together to harness the digital revolution towards urgent health challenges, while emphasising equity and greater participation from Low and Middle-Income Countries (LMIC) in the research and development
The World Health Organization (WHO) and the International Digital Health and AI Research Collaborative (I-DAIR) have signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) outlining their joint efforts to advance the use of digital technologies for personal and public health globally.
Through this agreement, WHO and I-DAIR will work together to harness the digital revolution towards urgent health challenges, while emphasising equity and greater participation from Low and Middle-Income Countries (LMIC) in the research and development and governance of the digital health and AI space, with particular focus on the inclusion of young researchers and entrepreneurs.
The partnership will focus on achieving these common goals through a multi-faceted approach focusing on promoting scientific cross-domain/cross-border collaboration and implementing innovative digital health long-term solutions, consistent with WHO recommendations and interoperability standards.
The joint activities include inter alia the promotion and the development of new norms and guidelines for the governance of health data as a public good, the building of evidence cases for thoughtful investments in digital health globally, and the strengthening of stakeholders’ capacities – for instance via the common elaboration of the WHO digital health competency framework.