Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

Tuesday, Jul 29, 2025
Mugglehead Investment Magazine
Alternative investment news based in Vancouver, B.C.
Hong Kong lung cancer survivor advocates for AI-powered screening measures
Hong Kong lung cancer survivor advocates for AI-powered screening measures
Norman Ng (right) and friends. Photo credit: LinkedIn

Medical and Pharmaceutical

Hong Kong lung cancer survivor advocates for AI-powered screening measures

Artificial intelligence has the power to cut healthcare costs associated with lung cancer screening in half, he highlighted

A Hong Kong lung cancer survivor firmly believes that artificial intelligence is the key to alleviating suffering caused by the disease.

In a LinkedIn post last week, Norman Ng said he was “truly inspired” by a recent presentation about a local AI-assisted lung cancer screening program. Ng currently serves as the Director of Patient Advocacy and Public Affairs at the organization Healthcare Thinkers and Convenor for a Lung Cancer Patient Concern Group in Hong Kong.

He founded the latter non-profit to help address the urgent needs in his community.

The roundtable discussion he attended, titled “Leading Technology and Medical Integration,” highlighted the value of using artificial intelligence to examine low-dose CT scans in a study completed by the Chinese University of Hong Kong’s Faculty of Medicine. It was highly impactful for detecting the condition in a group of non-smokers that had a family history of the disease.

Several companies throughout the globe have been steadily adopting this means of screening for the respiratory ailment because of its admirable efficiency.

More importantly though, as pointed out by Ng, using AI can make lung cancer screening much more affordable. A single low-dose CT scan assessment in Hong Kong costs about C$350, but artificial intelligence has the power to nearly slice that number in half, he stated.

Furthermore, early screening can reduce long-term medical expenses immensely through catching the disease in its early stages and acting promptly.

“We urge the government, the medical field, and all sectors of society to come together in support of widespread AI-based screening,” he proclaimed.

Norman is also a volunteer with the Hong Kong Cancer Fund.

“Let more citizens benefit from the fruits of technological and medical integration, and work hand in hand toward the vision of ‘early detection and early treatment’ in lung cancer care,” Ng added.

Low-dose CT scan assessments are not the only screening technique that AI has proved its worth in assisting with. It has also proven its ability to enhance the efficacy and speed of breath analysis tools that examine the composition of volatile organic compounds to identify the disease.

One remarkable medical tech developer in the United States, Breath Diagnostics (BD), just talked about this timely topic and its relevance to the company’s OneBreath screening tool in a blog post.

“It [AI] turns our detailed chemical data into precise diagnostic signals—spotting patterns across dozens of compounds,” said BD communications and business specialist, Stefan Weigl. “It doesn’t just analyze. It learns, improves, and adapts over time.”

Like the U.S. and the vast majority of countries throughout the globe, lung cancer is the number one cancer killer in the Chinese Special Administrative Region of Hong Kong.

Read more: Breath Diagnostics leader speaks at lung cancer education event in Louisville

Read more: Breath Diagnostics takes aim at lung cancer with One Breath

 

Follow Mugglehead on X

Like Mugglehead on Facebook

Follow Rowan Dunne on X

Follow Rowan Dunne on LinkedIn

rowan@mugglehead.com

Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

AI and Autonomy

Sin City visitors will have the opportunity to experience the classic film at the Sphere starting Aug. 28

Rare Earths

McKinsey & Company thinks the bull market will be primarily driven by magnetic rare earth elements

Bitcoin

The initiative is backed by Canadian investor and Shark Tank star Kevin O’Leary

Technology

The tech company's sensors are used by self-driving cars to detect objects at considerable distances