Oracle, Cleveland Clinic, and UAE-based AI firm G42 have announced a partnership to build a global, AI-powered healthcare delivery platform—one designed to make advanced, personalised care both scalable and cost-efficient.

It’s a rare alignment of tech muscle, clinical authority, and geopolitical ambition. Oracle is bringing its cloud infrastructure and AI data platform; Cleveland Clinic contributes elite clinical expertise; and G42 delivers sovereign AI infrastructure, health data integration, and deep machine learning capabilities. The aim is to turn healthcare systems into intelligent engines that can predict, personalise, and proactively manage care, starting in the U.S. and UAE, with global ambitions in tow.

An AI core for the “hospital of the future”

The platform envisions hospitals where real-time AI continuously analyses population-level and individual health data, flagging disease risk, surfacing best-treatment paths, and predicting operational bottlenecks before they happen.

As a result, clinicians will gain real-time clinical decision support, whereas public health leaders will have deeper insight into population health trends and more agile response strategies. Financial executives under pressure will be able to cut costs without cutting corners.

One of the boldest promises of the initiative is its potential to unify clinical care and life sciences R&D. By integrating real-world patient data into research workflows and allowing clinicians to identify and enroll trial participants at the point of care, the system could accelerate drug development while improving safety and effectiveness tracking.

This is especially important in an era when pharma is chasing highly targeted therapies and when regulatory bodies are demanding better post-market surveillance.

The UAE’s strategic play for health leadership

G42’s involvement also speaks to a broader ambition as the UAE is already a testbed for AI in healthcare and a co-leader in global health innovation. Cleveland Clinic Abu Dhabi, already a flagship of U.S.-UAE collaboration, will serve as a key launch point for the new platform. With the Emirates facing the same demographic pressures as Western nations, such as aging populations and rising chronic disease, the stakes and the appetite for transformation are high.

The partnership signals that enterprise healthcare is heading toward intelligent, interconnected ecosystems where data not only supports operations but drives them.

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