Health

NVIDIA, Foxconn and Taiwan Medical Centers Bring Agentic and Physical AI to ‘Healthy Taiwan’

Asia / Taiwan0 views1 min
NVIDIA, Foxconn and Taiwan Medical Centers Bring Agentic and Physical AI to ‘Healthy Taiwan’

Foxconn is deploying NVIDIA-powered AI agent workforces across Taiwan’s leading medical centers to coordinate clinical care, documentation, and logistics, scaling its CoDoctor AI platform and Nurabot robots under the government-backed 'Healthy Taiwan' initiative. The $1.5 billion program aims to address Taiwan’s aging population and clinician shortages by creating an AI-native health system with specialized agents for cardiovascular, oncology, and ophthalmology care, among others.

Foxconn and Taiwan’s leading medical centers are deploying NVIDIA AI to transform healthcare by replacing individual AI tools with coordinated AI agent workforces. These agents assist clinicians in reasoning, documenting, and orchestrating care, while physical robots like Nurabot handle logistics and procedural support. The system, powered by NVIDIA NemoClaw, has moved from pilot programs to clinical operations under Taiwan’s 'Healthy Taiwan' initiative, a $1.5 billion effort to build a sovereign AI-driven health system. The initiative addresses Taiwan’s rapidly aging population and clinician shortages by integrating digital and physical AI agents into hospital workflows. Digital agents handle clinical reasoning, documentation, and care coordination, while physical agents manage logistics, monitoring, and procedural tasks. Foxconn serves as the ecosystem integrator, connecting hospitals, device makers, and software companies to deploy AI at scale. Specialized AI agents within Foxconn’s CoDoctor platform include the ECG AI Agent for EKG screening, the Corovia AI Agent for 3D heart reconstruction, and the Endovia AI Agent for real-time colonoscopy lesion detection. These tools reduce clinical workflows from hours to minutes, improving efficiency and patient outcomes. The 'Healthy Taiwan' program spans clinical hospitals, academic institutions, and technology companies, aiming to create a model for countries facing similar healthcare challenges. With over 14 million patient encounters annually already using AI, Taiwan’s approach seeks to set a global standard for AI-driven healthcare systems.

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