When individuals with disabilities are involved in the development of technology that they will use, it leads to better digital solutions and promotes social inclusion.
In December, a delegation from the Centre for e-health and Sørlandet Hospital Trust (SSHF) went on a trip to Scotland where the goal was to understand Scotland's digital health scene better.
On 13 September, the Centre for e-health invited people to an Open Research Day, shedding light not only on the centre's research activities but also providing valuable insights into perspectives on trends and visions within e-health.
Many people with intellectual disabilities begin to receive disability benefits straight after completing upper secondary school. Can new technology help more people into employment?
The treatment of HIV patients works so well that 80 per cent of patients do not require follow-up appointments in hospital. The Hospital of Southern Norway (SSHF) and the University of Agder will now develop a fully digital solution for follow-up.
Eight UiA researchers have gained international recognition for developing artificial intelligence which can perform complex tasks 50 times faster and more accurately than a human.
Digitalization Minister Linda Hofstad Helleland supports an innovation project that aims to prevent self-harm in psychiatry with the help of artificial intelligence. She believes this can contribute to the government's goal of vision zero for suicides.