Breaking 17:00 Rave files antitrust lawsuit against Apple over App Store removal 16:45 BlackRock reduces private credit fund valuation by 5% in first quarter 16:20 Nvidia's Jensen Huang calls AI job loss warnings ridiculous and attacks rivals' God complex 16:15 United States sanctions Iraqi oil official and militias over alleged Iran ties 15:56 European climate model puts odds of a super El Niño by November at 100 percent 15:45 Whirlpool shares plunge after weak revenue and dividend suspension 15:23 Rubio visits Rome to ease Trump's rift with the Vatican and Italy 15:00 Trump and Lula meet at White House to address tariffs, minerals and security ties 14:30 Blackstone marks down private credit fund amid software sector concerns 13:02 Anthropic's Claude guided hackers toward water infrastructure control systems in documented cyberattack, report finds 13:00 US Jobless claims rise slightly as labor market remains stable 10:57 Ted Turner, CNN founder and American media pioneer, dies at 87 10:34 US Navy fighter jet disables Iranian tanker defying American naval blockade in Gulf of Oman 10:30 Brazil’s Lula visits Washington in bid to ease trade tensions with Trump 10:17 North Korea declares itself not bound by nuclear non-proliferation treaty at UN conference 10:00 Interpol operation leads to nearly 270 arrests in global medicine trafficking crackdown 10:00 Three US states monitor residents who traveled on hantavirus cruise ship as Andes strain confirmed 09:30 United States condemns Polisario attack on Es-Smara 09:00 Apple R&D spending tops 10 percent of revenue for first time as iPhone drives record quarter 08:37 Australian firm claims 3,000-fold quantum speedup over classical computing on real-world problem 08:16 Chinese chipmakers rally around DeepSeek V4 as Washington tightens AI export controls 08:00 General Motors recalls more than 40,000 vehicles in the United States over brake fluid issue 07:55 Mercedes opens European orders for its all-electric C-Class sedan starting at 67,000 euros 07:21 AI agent leaks passwords after simple social engineering trick in live experiment 07:01 Scientists identify 1,700 unknown proteins hidden in the human dark proteome

Navigating the double complexity of AI healthcare startups

Monday 13 October 2025 - 12:50
By: Dakir Madiha
Navigating the double complexity of AI healthcare startups

Artificial intelligence promises to revolutionize healthcare by enabling faster diagnoses and personalized patient care. Yet turning that promise into tangible results proves far more challenging, as recent research by Dr. Ahmed Zahlan, a PhD graduate from the Africa Business School at UM6P, demonstrates.

Dr. Zahlan examined the operational and ethical hurdles facing AI healthcare startups through interviews with founders of 55 ventures. His study highlights the “double bind” of merging regulated healthcare with rapidly evolving AI technologies, providing practical guidance for entrepreneurs, investors, and policymakers.

The challenge of translating AI into healthcare impact

Healthcare adoption of innovations is notoriously slow. Research shows that translating a discovery into routine clinical practice can take up to 17 years. AI adds layers of technical, ethical, and regulatory complexity. Zahlan’s study identifies mechanisms that allow some startups to scale successfully while others stall, providing a roadmap for navigating this challenging sector.

Teams over solo efforts

One key insight is the importance of diverse founding teams. Startups combining clinical expertise, technical skills, and managerial experience navigate hospital networks, clinical validations, and investor communications more effectively. “Get a doctor with you,” Zahlan advises, underscoring the value of clinician involvement for legitimacy, patient-centered design, and access to hospital collaborators.

Data as the strategic asset and the risk of AI washing

Data emerged as a critical factor. Startups with proprietary, well-curated patient datasets gain investor trust and clinical credibility. Zahlan warns against “AI washing,” where companies exaggerate their AI capabilities, risking both investor misguidance and solutions that fail to address healthcare needs. “First, find the problem,” he emphasizes, cautioning that AI should solve real issues rather than serve as a marketing label.

Regulatory strategies and sector-focused alliances

Early partnerships with hospitals, universities, and healthcare-focused incubators are crucial. Startups that align clinical expertise with large datasets and regulatory planning can achieve market clearance, as seen with Moroccan healthtech firm DeepEcho, which obtained FDA clearance for its AI fetal ultrasound analysis platform. Such examples show that African-rooted healthtech ventures can reach global markets when strategy, data, and clinical credibility converge.

Implications for Morocco’s AI healthcare ecosystem

Morocco’s AI ambitions are growing, with UM6P prioritizing regional capacity building and ethical AI solutions. Zahlan’s findings suggest near-term priorities: accelerating secure, interoperable electronic records, incorporating applied AI into medical education, and developing incubators and public-private programs for clinical validation. These steps could help translate Morocco’s AI momentum into meaningful health outcomes, providing actionable insights for founders and policymakers.


  • Fajr
  • Sunrise
  • Dhuhr
  • Asr
  • Maghrib
  • Isha

Read more

This website, walaw.press, uses cookies to provide you with a good browsing experience and to continuously improve our services. By continuing to browse this site, you agree to the use of these cookies.