
AITRICS (CEO Gwangjun Kim), a medical artificial intelligence (AI) company, announced on the 29th that it will participate in the Japanese medical industry exhibition 'Medical Japan 2025 Tokyo', which will be held from October 1st to 3rd.
Medical Japan, a professional medical exhibition showcasing the latest medical technologies and products to the world, is held annually in Osaka and Tokyo. At this exhibition, AITRICS will focus on AI-based proactive care across medical settings, from hospitals to clinics, and workflow innovations across the entire clinical process. The company plans to highlight its flagship products, AITRICS-VC (Vital Care) and V.Doc Pro.
VitalCare is a medical AI solution that analyzes electronic medical record (EMR) data to predict the early risk of sepsis, cardiac arrest, and death, supporting rapid clinical decision-making by medical professionals. Vdoc Pro is a medical copilot AI solution based on a proprietary Large Language Model (LLM), enabling medical professionals to focus on patient care. This solution dramatically reduces workload, from treatment preparation to conversation recording and follow-up care.
Through these two solutions, AITRIX strives to simultaneously implement proactive care by identifying and responding to patient conditions in advance, while also increasing efficiency in clinical settings. Japan, in particular, faces high demand for AI-based clinical decision support and hospital operation efficiency solutions due to its aging population and shortage of medical personnel. This exhibition is expected to expand local partnerships.
AITRIX CEO Kim Gwang-jun stated, "Japan is actively adopting medical AI, and its market size is growing rapidly. Through this participation in Medical Japan, we will widely promote AITRIX's proven AI technology and provide an environment where medical professionals, from hospitals to clinics, can take the lead in patient care." He added, "Going forward, we will continue to achieve both innovation in medical practices and patient safety through AI in Japan and other global markets."
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