Norway and India to Expand Health Cooperation Through New Agreement
Norway's prime minister announced plans to strengthen health ties with India. The two countries will sign a memorandum of understanding covering digital health, artificial intelligence, and research.
focustaiwan.twNorway's prime minister stated that Norway and India are strengthening their cooperation in health. The prime minister said there is "a lot to learn from India" and that the countries will sign a memorandum of understanding. The agreement will focus on developing high-tech quality health services.
It will also cover closer cooperation on digital health, artificial intelligence, research, and health technology.
The memorandum of understanding is expected to formalize existing health sector exchanges between the two countries. Officials have not released a signing date or specific implementation timeline. The prime minister's remarks highlighted India's contributions to health innovation as a basis for expanded collaboration.
Key Facts
Potential Impact
- 01
The agreement may increase joint health technology projects between Norway and India.
- 02
Research institutions in both countries could see expanded collaboration opportunities.
Transparency Panel
Related Stories
The GuardianWHO Chief Visits DRC as Ebola Death Rate Reaches 30-50%
World Health Organization director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus arrived in the Democratic Republic of the Congo to support containment of a new Ebola outbreak. The agency revised the death rate to 30-50% based on confirmed cases and recorded 10 confirmed and 223 suspected d…
westernjournal.comGreek National Charged in UK With Aiding Iran-Linked Intelligence Service
A 46-year-old Greek man living in Germany was charged under the UK National Security Act with assisting an intelligence service believed to be Iran by targeting a journalist at Iran International.
physicianonfire.comBilt Rewards reports $1 billion revenue target for 2026
Bilt Rewards CEO Ankur Jain said the company's flagship credit card accounts for less than 11 percent of revenue. The firm now processes more than $100 billion in annual housing spend across one in four U.S. apartment buildings.