Feds invest $15M in health-care AI through Vancouver program

Innovation, Science and Industry Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne is pictured on Monday, Jan. 29, 2024. (Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press)

The Canadian Press · Posted: Jul 10, 2024 

Patient-facing virtual agent expected to improve patient engagement

Canada is investing about $15 million toward the development of artificial intelligence in health care, which Federal Innovation Minister François-Philippe Champagne calls a “game changer” for improving the industry’s ability to serve patients.

Champagne says the funding will be invested through the ministry’s Vancouver-based technology cluster program in five medical tech companies, creating technology that automates certain tasks to enhance care.

The AI initiative, known as the Health Compass II project, will use the federal investment of $15.3 million as leverage for gaining additional investments from partners to support the total budget of $44 million.

The technologies being developed through the program include a “patient-facing virtual agent” that is estimated to improve patient engagement by 30 per cent, as well as automation that streamlines administrative tasks and clinical documentation.

The companies developing the technology say the implementation of AI automation can save doctors hours of time each day for seeing more patients or for taking breaks to maintain their wellness and service delivery.

Champagne says the latest investment builds on initial funding of $3.1 million from 2022 for AI integration in electronic medical records as part of the original Health Compass program.

“And this is technology that we can use today,” Champagne said during the investment announcement in Vancouver.

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