Close Menu
  • Homepage
  • News
  • Cloud & AI
  • ECommerce
  • Entertainment
  • Finance
  • Opinion
  • Podcast
  • Contact

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest technology news from TechFinancials News about FinTech, Tech, Business, Telecoms and Connected Life.

What's Hot

Ethereum Traders Increase Leverage On-Chain As HFDX Liquidity Hits New Highs

2026-01-31

New To On-Chain Perps? HFDX Is Rapidly Emerging As The Beginner-Friendly Option

2026-01-31

Standard Chartered GBA Business Confidence Indices reveal steady business sentiment

2026-01-31
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • Ethereum Traders Increase Leverage On-Chain As HFDX Liquidity Hits New Highs
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube LinkedIn WhatsApp RSS
TechFinancials
  • Homepage
  • News
  • Cloud & AI
  • ECommerce
  • Entertainment
  • Finance
  • Opinion
  • Podcast
  • Contact
TechFinancials
Home»Breaking News»AI: The New Stethoscope For South Africa’s Heart Health
Breaking News

AI: The New Stethoscope For South Africa’s Heart Health

Staff WriterBy Staff Writer2025-10-01No Comments5 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
AI
AI. Shutterstock
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email Copy Link

South Africa is urbanising at speed. Every day, thousands of people move into cities in search of work, education and opportunity. However, the same forces that make cities engines of growth also create silent risks for health. Sedentary lifestyles, fast food on the go, long commutes and relentless stress are reshaping the nation’s health profile. Cardiovascular disease, once seen as a disease of affluence or old age, is now rising sharply among younger South Africans.

Dr David Jankelow, past president of the South African Heart Association, has described the country’s cardiovascular epidemic as a tsunami overwhelming both public and private facilities., with resources concerntrated in a handful of urban centres. The country’s ratio of just 200 cardiologists for 63 million people underlines the challenge, making it one cardiologist for every 315 000 people. Access remains uneven too, specialists are clustered in Johannesburg, Cape Town and Durban, leaving rural communities with almost no care.

The consequences of this gap are not confined to older patients. The rise of heart disease among young adults in their 20s and 30s is especially concerning. Once considered an ailment of later life, it now affects a generation that should be at its most productive, a reality underscored by recent global campaign such as  World Heart Day and its call to action,‘Don’t miss a beat’. Hypertension, obesity and diabetes are becoming embedded in urban youth culture, with long-term implications not only for public health but for economic growth and social stability.

Balancing the pressures of rapid urbanisation with the realities of rising disease requires new approaches. Traditional healthcare systems cannot scale quickly enough, and the uneven distribution of specialists makes the divide even starker, and it is precicely where Artificial Intelligence (AI) is offering a way forward.

Two centuries ago, the stethoscope transformed medicine by turning an invisible condition into something doctors could hear, interpret and act on, giving doctors the ability to detect problems earlier and with greater accuracy, fundamentally changing how patients were assessed.

Like the stethoscope two centuries ago, AI makes the invisible visible. An ECG interpreted by AI can flag irregularities long before symptoms emerge, while a smartphone camera can capture vital signs in seconds, turning an everyday device into a diagnostic tool. In busy casualty wards, AI-powered triage systems help prioritise patients most at risk, reducing errors caused by fatigue or stress. Beyond the bedside, these technologies act as an equaliser, stretching scarce expertise, supporting clinics with limited budgets, and extending care into rural and informal communities.

However, algorithms alone cannot deliver this transformation, they need the digital backbone to travel, connect and scale. On a recent visit to Huawei’s innovation campuses in China, Blue Networks and Infrastructure (BNI), a leading South African provider of enterprise networking solutions saw first-hand how this backbone is already reshaping healthcare. From telemedicine platforms that connect specialists to rural clinics through 5G and 4K video, to Smart Ward and Smart Hospital systems that integrate IoT devices for continuous monitoring, Huawei’s solutions are demonstrating what a fully digital healthcare ecosystem can look like.

Remote training rooms equipped with high-definition video bring surgery demonstrations to classrooms, ensuring that the next generation of doctors can learn from leading specialists wherever they are. While not yet rolled out in South Africa, these deployments show what is possible when AI and connectivity converge and how such innovations could one day help bridge the country’s healthcare divide.

This vision is not too far removed from South Africa’s own realities. At Bara Taxi Rank in Soweto, the South African Heart Association recently demonstrated how AI-enabled tools can bring heart health screening directly to communities that rarely access specialist care.

Taxi drivers underwent quick, non-invasive checks that measured blood pressure, heart rate and other risk factors in minutes. Dr  Jankelow, who was instrumental to the campaign, noted that taxi drivers, who keep the country moving, often face high health risks but limited access to preventative care, noting that this was the first heart assessment for the majority of the drivers, revealing a glaring gap in healthcare access for disadvantaged communities.

The same is true for South Africa’s rapidly growing cities. Urbanisation creates opportunity, but it also fuels the lifestyle risks, poor diet, long commutes, relentless stress, that drive cardiovascular disease. Without new solutions, the pace of urban growth will only widen the gap between need and access. AI, supported by the right digital infrastructure, offers a way to restore balance: extending scarce expertise, scaling preventative care, and meeting people where they are, whether in a busy clinic or a crowded taxi rank.

AI’s greatest value lies in this partnership between people and technology. Algorithms can flag risks earlier, process vast amounts of data and reduce routine burdens, while clinicians bring the judgement, empathy and decision-making that no machine can replicate. Together, they create a health system that is more preventative, equitable and resilient.

AI Blue Networks and Infrastructure cardiovascular epidemic Dr David Jankelow Huawei South Africa’s Heart Health South African Heart Association World Heart Day
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Staff Writer

Related Posts

Meet The €2.95M Capricorn 01 Zagato Hypercar Rebel

2026-01-30

SARB Holds Repo Rate Steady in Cautious Monetary Policy Decision

2026-01-29

South Africa Could Unlock SME Growth By Exploiting AI’s Potential Through Corporate ESD Funds

2026-01-28

How Local Leaders Can Shift Their Trajectory In 2026

2026-01-23

Huawei Says The Next Wave Of Infrastructure Investment Must Include People, Not Only Platforms

2026-01-21

The Boardroom Challenge: Governing AI, Data And Digital

2026-01-20

South Africa: Best Starting Point In Years, With 3 Clear Priorities Ahead

2026-01-12

ConvoGPT and Founder Jeremy David Announce ConvoGPT OS with Enterprise Partnership with ElevenLabs

2026-01-08

The Future Of Work – Skills, Not Fear – South Africa’s Path To An AI-Ready Workforce

2026-01-07
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

DON'T MISS
Breaking News

Meet The €2.95M Capricorn 01 Zagato Hypercar Rebel

capricorn GROUP (capricorn), the German-based industry leader in automotive and motorsport lightweight technology, presented two…

SARB Holds Repo Rate Steady in Cautious Monetary Policy Decision

2026-01-29

Huawei Says The Next Wave Of Infrastructure Investment Must Include People, Not Only Platforms

2026-01-21

South Africa: Best Starting Point In Years, With 3 Clear Priorities Ahead

2026-01-12
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • LinkedIn
OUR PICKS

How a Major Hotel Group Is Electrifying South Africa’s Travel

2026-01-29

Volvo C70: 30 Years Of The Car That Changed The Way Volvo Looked

2026-01-29

The EX60 Cross Country: Built For The “Go Anywhere” Attitude

2026-01-23

Mettus Launches Splendi App To Help Young South Africans Manage Their Credit Health

2026-01-22

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest tech news from TechFinancials about telecoms, fintech and connected life.

About Us

TechFinancials delivers in-depth analysis of tech, digital revolution, fintech, e-commerce, digital banking and breaking tech news.

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit RSS
Our Picks

Ethereum Traders Increase Leverage On-Chain As HFDX Liquidity Hits New Highs

2026-01-31

New To On-Chain Perps? HFDX Is Rapidly Emerging As The Beginner-Friendly Option

2026-01-31

Standard Chartered GBA Business Confidence Indices reveal steady business sentiment

2026-01-31
Recent Posts
  • Ethereum Traders Increase Leverage On-Chain As HFDX Liquidity Hits New Highs
  • New To On-Chain Perps? HFDX Is Rapidly Emerging As The Beginner-Friendly Option
  • Standard Chartered GBA Business Confidence Indices reveal steady business sentiment
  • AFF draws 4,000+ global political and business leaders, inaugural Global Business Summit
  • NSFW AI Chat with Advanced Memory Systems for Contextual Interaction Launches on Dream Companion
TechFinancials
RSS Facebook X (Twitter) LinkedIn YouTube WhatsApp
  • Homepage
  • Newsletter
  • Contact
  • Advertise
  • Privacy Policy
  • About
© 2026 TechFinancials. Designed by TFS Media. TechFinancials brings you trusted, around-the-clock news on African tech, crypto, and finance. Our goal is to keep you informed in this fast-moving digital world. Now, the serious part (please read this): Trading is Risky: Buying and selling things like cryptocurrencies and CFDs is very risky. Because of leverage, you can lose your money much faster than you might expect. We Are Not Advisors: We are a news website. We do not provide investment, legal, or financial advice. Our content is for information and education only. Do Your Own Research: Never rely on a single source. Always conduct your own research before making any financial decision. A link to another company is not our stamp of approval. You Are Responsible: Your investments are your own. You could lose some or all of your money. Past performance does not predict future results. In short: We report the news. You make the decisions, and you take the risks. Please be careful.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Ad Blocker Enabled!
Ad Blocker Enabled!
Our website is made possible by displaying online advertisements to our visitors. Please support us by disabling your Ad Blocker.