According to doctors and specialists in critical care medicine, artificial intelligence has increased the recovery rates for intensive care patients by between 80% and 90%. They said that the infection is the first cause of intensive care entry, and confirmed the existence of a new electronic system monitors the movement of the patient's brain around the clock to take appropriate action, to avoid the occurrence of strokes.

This came in a press statement on the sidelines of the 15th UAE Critical Care Conference, which is being held under the patronage of HH Sheikh Hamdan bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Deputy Ruler of Dubai and Minister of Finance, Chairman of Dubai Health Authority.

The President of the Conference, Dr. Hussein Al Rahma, said that the use of artificial intelligence techniques to serve intensive care patients increased the recovery rate among patients, as it helped the heart and lung recovery, as well as the role played by artificial intelligence in the creation of new drugs.

Al Rahma stressed that the UAE is among the best countries in the field of critical care, thanks to the readiness of hospitals and qualified medical and nursing staff in the public and private sectors.

He said the conference revealed a new electronic system that will be introduced to critical care rooms in hospitals, allowing the patient to monitor the patient's brain movement around the clock, especially for patients with strokes, pre-strokes and involuntary movements, to protect patients from the dangerous complications that usually occur after a stroke.

Dr. Jamil Itani, Medical Director of the Cambridge Centers for Medicine and Rehabilitation, said: "Artificial intelligence has provided many potentials and tools for physicians in various medical disciplines, especially in critical care, "The weaning program for artificial respiration," the newest and most powerful in the region, helps patients who rely on artificial respirators in the weaning process, and return to normal functions again without any risks, noting that the program is available to children starting from weight Three kilograms, the older. Itani explained that the innovative program, based on the use of artificial intelligence in critical care, succeeded 70% in saving people of different ages, after being subjected to fatal accidents. Dr. Yunus Kazem, Executive Director of Dubai Healthcare, said that artificial intelligence has increased the cure rates for intensive care patients by more than 90%. He pointed out that the Health Authority in Dubai is working to modernize its departments, providing all devices that use artificial intelligence in the provision of medical care, noting that it is possible for patients to take their medical equipment developed, their own, measuring devices and monitoring indicators body, The possibility of connecting devices directly to doctors, even if they are outside the state, to obtain the information required of them, and then write the appropriate prescription.