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Medical AI Ecosystem Innovation Forum and iMedLoop Global Medical Imaging Data Platform Launch Held in Beijing

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Medical AI Ecosystem Innovation Forum and iMedLoop Global Medical Imaging Data Platform Launch Held in Beijing
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Medical AI Ecosystem Innovation Forum and iMedLoop Global Medical Imaging Data Platform Launch Held in Beijing

2026-07-10 17:04 Last Updated At:17:25

When Healthcare Meets AI: A New Era of Ecosystem-wide Innovation Is Accelerating

BEIJING, July 10, 2026 /PRNewswire/ -- On July 4, the Medical AI Ecosystem Innovation Forum and iMedLoop Global Medical Imaging Data Platform Launch was held in Beijing.

Jointly organized by Liaowang Finance, under Liaowang Weekly, and Diagens Technology, the event was guided by the theme of "AI for Science", bringing together stakeholders from government, industry, academia, research, and healthcare across the medical AI ecosystem. More than 100 representatives attended the forum, including experts and leaders from the Chinese Academy of Sciences, the Chinese Academy of Engineering, the China National Health Association, the China Academy of Information and Communications Technology (CAICT), the Cyberspace Administration of Zhejiang Province, Zhejiang Cancer Hospital, Ruijin Hospital Affiliated to Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine, Hangzhou Data Group, and Legend Holdings.

During the event, Diagens Technology officially launched the iMedLoop Global Medical Imaging Data Platform, a proprietary platform developed specifically for the medical AI industry. More than 30 strategic cooperation agreements were also signed. Together, these initiatives establish a practical platform for collaboration among government, industry, academia, research, and healthcare sectors to advance the high-quality development of medical AI, while providing infrastructure to support China's participation in the global medical AI ecosystem.

Unlocking the Full Value of Data for Medical AI

As the digital economy converges with the Healthy China strategy, artificial intelligence has become a key driver of new-quality productive forces in healthcare. With the continued advancement of tiered diagnosis and treatment, precision medicine, and smart hospitals, medical imaging has become an essential foundation for disease screening, clinical diagnosis, and medical research. As a result, the value of medical imaging data continues to grow, making compliant data circulation and utilization an inevitable direction for industry development. China's National Data Administration, in its Action Plan for the Development of Trusted Data Spaces (2024–2028), has explicitly identified healthcare as one of the priority sectors for the development of trusted data spaces.

During the keynote session, Professor Chen Runsheng, bioinformatician and researcher at the Institute of Biophysics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, delivered a presentation entitled "Technical Principles and Future Challenges of Large AI Models." He explained the technological foundations, innovative nature, and future prospects of large AI models, noting that artificial intelligence has become deeply integrated into medical imaging and is increasingly serving as an essential analytical tool. He remarked that AI can integrate the knowledge and expertise of medical imaging specialists, bringing together multiple analytical approaches to deliver high-quality imaging analysis capabilities. In his view, AI's greatest strength lies not only in processing vast volumes of imaging data, but also in consolidating the knowledge and experience of multiple experts, overcoming the limitations of individual interpretation in ways that traditional manual image reading cannot achieve.

Drawing on frontline experience in hospital digital and smart transformation, Cai Xiujun, Academician of the Chinese Academy of Sciences and President of Sir Run Run Shaw Hospital, vividly demonstrated the innovative applications of AI in healthcare. Through practical examples — including remote robotic surgery, remote ultrasound diagnosis, intelligent pre-consultation systems, and AI-assisted medical imaging diagnosis — he demonstrated the innovative applications of AI in healthcare. Academician Cai emphasized that the core value of medical AI lies in solving real clinical challenges, improving the capabilities of primary healthcare institutions, and continuously enhancing patient experience. He also identified data quality, data scale, and data security as the three critical factors determining the success of AI applications in healthcare. Poorly standardized or low-quality data, he noted, directly reduces AI performance and ultimately limits its clinical value and broader adoption. He called on the industry to prioritize standardized medical data governance and robust compliance and security frameworks as the foundation for AI-enabled healthcare.

Academician Dong Jiahong of the Chinese Academy of Engineering, Dean of the School of Clinical Medicine at Tsinghua University and President of Beijing Tsinghua Changgung Hospital, stated that the engineering foundations for AI hospitals are now in place, driven by the simultaneous maturation of three pillars: the commercialization of AI-powered medical devices, the advancement of large medical AI models to near-specialist levels of clinical reasoning, and the engineering development of AI agents. Unlike smart hospitals, internet hospitals, or medical alliances, AI hospitals, he explained, are built upon digital twins and powered by AI-native operational logic. Such hospitals fundamentally reshape the entire healthcare workflow — from perception and cognition to decision-making and service delivery — enabling seamless integration of online and offline healthcare while providing proactive, lifecycle-wide health management that truly realizes the vision of AI Healthcare.

Dou Xizhao, President of the China National Health Association, observed that medical AI is rapidly evolving from isolated product applications toward comprehensive, ecosystem-driven development. Industry competition, he said, is no longer defined solely by algorithms and models, but increasingly by data resources, standards, application scenarios, innovation ecosystems, and integrated service capabilities. He emphasized that medical imaging data, given its scale, value, and broad applicability, provides a critical foundation for AI-assisted diagnosis and medical research innovation. He called on all stakeholders to strengthen open collaboration and, under the principles of legal compliance and data security, fully unlock the value of medical data so that it can better serve medical research, clinical practice, and industrial innovation.

Building a Trusted Industrial Foundation for Medical Imaging AI

Building a trusted collaborative platform that spans the entire medical imaging data lifecycle is fundamental for the industry to overcome development bottlenecks and achieve large-scale adoption.

At the event, Dr. Song Ning, Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer of Diagens Technology, officially unveiled the iMedLoop Global Medical Imaging Data Platform. He noted that there are more than 3,000 medical imaging indications worldwide, while traditional AI model training typically requires hundreds of thousands of annotated images, with each annotation taking approximately one hour. Even if hundreds of thousands of imaging, pathology, and laboratory professionals across China devoted one hour per day to annotation work, completing the annotations for all projects would still take more than a thousand years.

To address the industry's heavy reliance on annotated data for model training, Diagens Technology launched iMedImage®, the world's largest medical imaging foundation model by parameter scale in its field, in May 2025. According to Dr. Song, the foundation model reduces the amount of annotated data required for disease-specific model training to one two-hundredth of traditional levels, shortens development cycles to one-twelfth, and reduces both development costs and computing expenses to one-tenth. Leveraging this foundation model, Diagens has participated in six national and provincial-level major projects and collaborated with 87 leading hospitals over the past 12 months to train 145 vertical AI models.

Regarding data annotation, Dr. Song identified four major pain points in current global annotation tools: inconsistent data formats that are difficult to process, low manual annotation efficiency, uneven annotation accuracy, and challenges in multi-person collaboration and quality control. To address these issues, Diagens introduced iMedStudio, a new-generation intelligent annotation tool featuring four core capabilities: multimodal integration, human-AI collaboration, precise segmentation, and intelligent arbitration.

iMedLoop integrates the iMedImage® foundation model, the iMedStudio intelligent annotation tool, and the iMedMaaS online model training and deployment platform to create a closed-loop ecosystem for medical data annotation and circulation, vertical model training, and model deployment. The platform is now officially open, with more than 3,000 professional annotators onboarded, 28.95 million high-quality data records and over 100 medical AI models deployed, and active participation from multiple data suppliers, AI healthcare companies, and ecosystem partners, establishing a strong resource and industrial foundation for the global medical AI industry.

Dr. Song stated that the platform is committed to deep integration of technology, data, and application scenarios, and that through the joint efforts of hospitals, research institutions, and technology companies, China's medical AI industry has the potential to become a new pillar of the global healthcare sector.

Collaboratively Building an Innovative Medical AI Ecosystem

The high-quality development of medical AI requires coordinated efforts from diverse stakeholders. A roundtable discussion was held during the forum, bringing together representatives from basic research, clinical practice, policy and standards, and platform operations to discuss the construction of an industry-wide innovation ecosystem.

Academician Zhan Qimin of the Chinese Academy of Engineering, Director of the National Institute of Health Data Science at Peking University, stated that AI is driving oncology toward more personalized and precise treatment. "In the past, treatments were often broad and one-size-fits-all, without sufficient consideration for individual differences and precision. Such approaches could lead to significant side effects and limited efficacy. Today, by combining multi-omics data with AI analysis and applying the insights to pathology slides, it is becoming possible to provide each cancer patient with a truly tailored treatment plan." He also highlighted AI's potential in drug discovery, including shorter development cycles, lower costs, and higher success rates. In his view, the integration of AI and medicine is shortening the distance between the laboratory and the clinic, providing sustained momentum for the evolution of the medical AI ecosystem.

Zhang Hong, Deputy Party Secretary and Executive President of Zhejiang Cancer Hospital, emphasized the importance of real-world clinical application scenarios within ecosystem collaboration. He argued that for AI to be adopted in hospitals, it must meet three requirements: improved efficiency, ease of use, and data security. "All three standards are indispensable." Clinical practice, he said, is both the ultimate testing ground for AI value and the source of feedback that drives technological iteration. Only when hospitals can afford to use AI and use it effectively can AI complete the value loop from research to application.

Ren Jiuxuan, Deputy Director of the Digital Health Department at the Institute of Cloud Computing and Digitalization of the China Academy of Information and Communications Technology, stated that the healthy development of the medical AI ecosystem depends on a unified evaluation framework. "We are building a dual-track evaluation system covering both laboratory testing and clinical validation. In addition to general model capability assessments, we have introduced testing for AI agents capable of multi-turn dialogue, because real clinical diagnosis is an interactive process in which patients and doctors gradually uncover information together rather than providing all information to AI at once." He noted that China has advantages in data resources and application scenarios, that the diversity of domestic AI products already exceeds that of the United States, and that the computing gap between the two countries is narrowing. He believes that high-quality medical datasets will experience explosive industry growth within the next one to two years.

From the perspective of industrial practice, Dr. Song Ning explained the technological foundation of ecosystem collaboration. "iMedImage® is the technological foundation; without it, building an ecosystem would be like building a castle on sand. iMedLoop is the collaborative platform that integrates annotation, governance, validation, and the entire workflow." He emphasized that the platform will remain open and work with medical institutions, research organizations, and industry partners to lower the barriers to AI-driven healthcare innovation. "The greatest challenge remains technological breakthroughs. Once the underlying technology advances, regulation and commercialization will gradually follow. What is required is long-term commitment."

Zheng Mingzhi, former Vice Chairman of the Zhejiang Federation of Industry and Commerce and Vice President of the Zhejiang Merchants Development Institute, remarked that the future of medicine belongs not only to those who understand AI, but also to those who can apply AI appropriately. He stressed that the healthcare industry must keep pace with the AI era and make AI a true clinical support tool and assistant for physicians. In this process, he said, the iMedLoop platform is poised to play a very important role.

A strategic cooperation signing ceremony for the co-development of the medical AI ecosystem was also held during the forum. Hangzhou Data Group, Legend Holdings, the Wenzhou Municipal Health Commission, Zhengzhou People's Hospital, the School of Mathematics, Physics and Medicine of Zhejiang Normal University, InferVision, and dozens of other institutions reached cooperation agreements. Leveraging the iMedLoop platform, the parties will collaborate on data governance, algorithm innovation, model development, and clinical validation to build a comprehensive medical AI innovation ecosystem, explore new pathways for improving healthcare delivery, and contribute to the advancement of the Healthy China initiative.

** This press release is distributed by PR Newswire through automated distribution system, for which the client assumes full responsibility. **

Medical AI Ecosystem Innovation Forum and iMedLoop Global Medical Imaging Data Platform Launch Held in Beijing

Medical AI Ecosystem Innovation Forum and iMedLoop Global Medical Imaging Data Platform Launch Held in Beijing

Former Admissions Officer Topher Bordeau shares insights on the AI-packaging trap across Bangkok, Kuala Lumpur, Hong Kong and Shanghai tour.

HONG KONG, July 10, 2026 /PRNewswire/ -- As generative AI becomes more widespread and academic systems across Asia grow increasingly standardised, the selection criteria at the world's top universities are undergoing a significant shift. In 2026, the number of "perfect-score" applications submitted by Asian students to Ivy League institutions reached a new high — yet admission rates at these institutions remain stubbornly low, hovering between just 4% and 7%. [1] [2]

The Asia Road Show, organised by True North Education and spanning four hubs—Bangkok, Kuala Lumpur, Hong Kong, and Shanghai—has concluded, drawing over a thousand parents and students across the four cities.

True North Education invited Mr Topher Bordeau, a former senior Ivy League admissions officer with 20 years of experience who has personally reviewed over 15,000 application files, to deliver the keynote address.

During the tour, Bordeau shared a candid assessment: roughly 95% of applications are rejected largely because they rely too heavily on AI-polished, formulaic packaging. This level of over-standardisation can strip an application of a student's individuality. In the eyes of admissions officers, these carefully engineered "perfect resumes" often read as impersonal and interchangeable — one reason many high-achieving students face rejection despite strong academic records.

Addressing a Common Blind Spot: The Overlooked Power of Recommendation Letters

Edward Lee, Managing Partner at True North Education, addressed a specific blind spot common among Hong Kong students. He noted that in planning their applications, Hong Kong students often devote the vast majority of their energy to academic scores while overlooking the strategic value of strong recommendation letters.

"Secondary school teachers in Hong Kong are often stretched thin, which means local recommendation letters tend to rely on rigid, generic templates. Admissions officers read hundreds of these letters a day, and generic praise carries little weight," Lee said.

"Our senior consulting team encourages students to take the initiative — to proactively build genuine, organic relationships with teachers and mentors. This is one of the most effective ways to stand out among tens of thousands of files."

Standing Out in the AI Era: The Power of Authentic Voice

During the panel discussion, Bordeau and Lee examined the impact of generative AI on personal statements in 2026.

Bordeau noted that admissions officers can easily detect AI-assisted writing, since it tends to sound generic and lacks the texture of real personal experience. He emphasised that strong personal essays are built on authentic voice and lived experience. For example, broad, sweeping topics like "solving climate change" routinely fall flat, while a narrower, more specific focus — such as a genuine fascination with a particular battery technology — is far more likely to capture an admissions officer's attention.

When "Flawless" Isn't Enough: The Cost of Conformity for Hong Kong Families

Reflecting on this shift in Ivy League admissions standards, Samuel Chan, Managing Partner at True North Education and Founder of Britannia, who has worked with thousands of Hong Kong families, observed: "Many middle-class and elite Hong Kong families hold onto the belief that a resume must be engineered around a single, outcome-driven track. Children are pushed toward competitions and grades from an early age. The cost of this approach can be significant."

"Parents invest considerable resources — financial and emotional — often unaware that these highly engineered, formulaic resumes can come across as impersonal to Ivy League admissions officers," Chan added.

According to data previously disclosed from the National Centre for Education Statistics and the Harvard University litigation[3], 40% to 50% of all Asian applicants to top-tier universities rank in the top 1% to 2% nationally in standardised test scores (SAT/ACT).

"When everyone has a perfect score, perfect scores lose their screening value," Chan supplemented, noting that applicants relying solely on academic perfect scores face an ultimate acceptance rate of less than 8%. Asian applicants are frequently rated lower on subjective traits such as leadership, courage, humour, or empathy — largely because their essays are overly polished and formulaic, lacking authentic personal voice.

Regional Perspectives: Southeast Asia and Mainland China

Addressing the Southeast Asian and East China markets covered in the tour, True North Education's regional partners offered localised analysis.

Ronald Mak, Managing Partner at True North Education, overseeing the Thailand and Malaysia markets, noted that while enthusiasm for Ivy League admissions among elite families is at a historic high, their strategic approach often carries a specific bias: "Bangkok and Kuala Lumpur have well-established, top-tier international school networks, and students there tend to have strong bilingual capabilities and global exposure. But local families often view Ivy League admission as a status symbol, leaning too heavily on school prestige and conventional extracurricular frameworks."

"Parents often overlook opportunities to nurture their child's intrinsic interests, or to translate Southeast Asia's distinct cultural context into a genuine personal advantage in university applications. This remains a missed opportunity in the current admissions cycle. Thai and Malaysian families should recognise that Ivy League universities are looking for original thinkers — not simply high-achieving students who fit a familiar international-school mould."

Amond Chun, Managing Partner of Britannia, dissected the extreme realities and shifting paradigms within Shanghai and other mainland Chinese cities:

"The competition within the Gaokao and domestic higher education has reached a white-hot, zero-sum bottleneck. Concurrently, according to the latest industry data, a staggering 94% of overseas Chinese students choose to return to mainland China for employment and career development post-graduation."

"Faced with domestic enterprises demanding increasingly stringent credentials and backgrounds, returnee talents can no longer coast simply on a foreign degree. In the past, parents blindly piled up grandiose research projects or multinational internships; today in 2026, admissions officers and top corporate recruiters alike have long developed aesthetic fatigue toward this." Chun analysed.

Own Your Narrative, Not Your Imperfections

Families navigating the Ivy League admissions process shouldn't let fear of imperfection drive their strategy. True North Education moves away from cookie-cutter formulas and is instead committed to helping every student uncover and tell their own genuine story.

During this critical window of university planning, rather than shaping children into formulaic applicants, families are far better served by professional guidance that helps spark real curiosity and passion in their child. This is the most effective path to the world's top academic institutions.

[1]  'Ivy Leagues Complete 2026 Overview for Students and Parents', https://www.scholaro.com/db/News/ivy-leagues-complete-2026-overview-for-students-and-parents-253 

[2] Harvard College Admissions Data, https://college.harvard.edu/admissions/admissions-statistics 

[3]  'Supreme Court Opinion: Students for Fair Admissions v. Harvard', https://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/22pdf/20-1199_hgdj.pdf 

[1]  'Ivy Leagues Complete 2026 Overview for Students and Parents', https://www.scholaro.com/db/News/ivy-leagues-complete-2026-overview-for-students-and-parents-253 

[2] Harvard College Admissions Data, https://college.harvard.edu/admissions/admissions-statistics 

[3]  'Supreme Court Opinion: Students for Fair Admissions v. Harvard', https://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/22pdf/20-1199_hgdj.pdf 

 

 

About Britannia 

Founded in 2013, Britannia StudyLink is a leading UK education consultancy providing comprehensive, one-stop advisory services for students pursuing studies in the United Kingdom. Its services cover school selection, applications, entrance exams, interviews, visa arrangements, and pre-departure support.

Representing over 300 UK primary and secondary private schools and covering nearly 80% of UK boarding schools, Britannia has become a trusted partner for families in Hong Kong, with one in every two Hong Kong students attending UK boarding schools applying through the consultancy. The organisation maintains close ties with UK institutions and served as a key communication bridge during the COVID-19 pandemic. In 2021, it became the first and only education consultancy to receive both the "Hong Kong Service Brand" and "Hong Kong Premier Service Brand" awards. Headquartered in Hong Kong, Britannia operates offices across Asia and Europe.

Website: www.britannia-study.com 

About True North Education

True North Education, co-founded by Samuel Hwang and Danny Hwang, is a premier US and UK admissions consultancy backed by strategic investment from Gaw Capital. With over 15 years of expertise in elite admissions and talent development, the team has guided students to Ivy League, Oxbridge, and Top 30 U.S. universities, achieving a 95% admissions success rate.

The organisation combines admissions consulting with research mentorship, leadership training, and holistic development programs for students from primary through university level. With offices across Asia and Europe, and the founding of True North International School in Hanoi. True North is committed to nurturing globally minded future leaders.

Website: https://truenorth-edu.com 

CONTACT: 

Jessica Lai
tel
9500 6379 
support@britannia-study.com

Ben Wan
tel
5500 3655 
info@truenorth-edu.com

Jessica Lai
tel
9500 6379 
support@britannia-study.com

Ben Wan
tel
5500 3655 
info@truenorth-edu.com

** This press release is distributed by PR Newswire through automated distribution system, for which the client assumes full responsibility. **

Beyond the Perfect Score: Why Elite Asian Applicants Are Being Overlooked by Ivy League Admissions

Beyond the Perfect Score: Why Elite Asian Applicants Are Being Overlooked by Ivy League Admissions

Beyond the Perfect Score: Why Elite Asian Applicants Are Being Overlooked by Ivy League Admissions

Beyond the Perfect Score: Why Elite Asian Applicants Are Being Overlooked by Ivy League Admissions

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