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Taiwan’s Smart Health System: Why It Deserves WHO Inclusion
TaiwanTuesday, June 2, 2026
Taiwan has built a leading digital health system that shows how technology can improve care.
- Network: Links more than 400 hospitals and uses AI to spot cancer, predict heart attacks, and help doctors treat patients faster.
- Data Foundation: The National Health Insurance holds a huge amount of clean data, which researchers use to train AI safely.
- 3‑3‑3 Framework: Brings together three health areas, three data rules, and three AI centers.
- Interoperability: Follows global standards like Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources so records can travel between hospitals easily.
- Security: Uses a “Zero Trust” model that keeps patient information safe.
Patient Empowerment
- Online Access: Patients can view test results online and use AI to read images.
- Wearables: Digital tools let people track health from wearables, saving time for doctors and helping patients stay healthy.
- Telemedicine: Allows rural residents to see specialists without traveling long distances.
Outcomes
- Life‑Saving: Innovations have already saved lives and cut costs.
- Preventive Focus: AI helps doctors focus on prevention instead of waiting for illness to worsen.
- Speedy Care: The system speeds up cancer treatment approvals, giving patients quicker access to care.
Global Impact
Taiwan’s success shows that a data‑driven health system can work worldwide. It has shared AI models with other Asian countries without moving private data, proving it can cooperate safely.
Political Context
Despite this, Taiwan is not allowed to join the World Health Organization as a full member. The exclusion is a policy choice, not a rule from the UN or WHO. Leaving Taiwan out weakens global health security and slows progress on new medical technologies. If the WHO accepted Taiwan, it would bring fresh ideas, better data sharing, and stronger pandemic readiness to all.
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