Kim Dong-min, JLK CEO. /Courtesy of Jung Dong-heon, contributing reporter

JLK said on the 5th that its stroke artificial intelligence (AI) solution has been introduced to military hospitals under the Armed Forces Medical Command on a subscription basis.

The solution is used in military hospitals as a tool to assist medical staff in their decisions. When a patient is suspected of having a stroke, it provides image-based analysis results that are used as References during care.

JLK said that with the adoption of this solution, the initial response flow has been standardized to a certain level for each hospital, and the decision-making process among medical staff has become clearer. As the same standard of clinical support becomes available regardless of region or hospital size, the company said the effects go beyond diagnostic assistance to improving the overall stability and credibility of the military medical system.

This introduction applied the same solution across the entire military medical system, not to individual military hospitals. It is evaluated as meaningful in that it shows AI-based clinical support infrastructure is being built step by step.

The industry views this case as showing a trend in which medical AI technology is expanding from use at the hospital level to the system level. In particular, by applying a subscription-based supply model, it reduced the initial setup burden for each hospital while enabling rapid application across all hospitals, and it is being cited as a model suitable for public medical environments, including the military.

A JLK official said, "It is highly meaningful that the stroke AI solution is being used as an actual clinical support tool in military hospitals," and added, "We will continue to contribute to emergency care support by advancing technology that reflects the characteristics of the military medical environment."

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