Dubai‑Based AI Doctor Platform Expands Across Middle East 
Out of Dubai comes Meditrix AI, a young tech outfit now pushing its smart diagnosis tool through clinics across the Middle East by 2026. Doctor Fatima Al-Najjar started it – she studied medicine in Saudi Arabia – aiming to shift how basic medical care works. Instead of guessing, clinics tap into software stored online that checks patient complaints alongside heartbeat data from wrist gadgets and past hospital notes. This mix spots silent threats like rising blood sugar or heart strain long before they flare up. From Riyadh down to Cairo, medical rooms are plugging in, letting computers handle routine paperwork so physicians can focus on complex visits. Staff shortages weigh heavily on government health systems here, making such support far more than just convenient.
Meditrix AI follows health rules set by local governments and groups like the World Health Organization, offering tools in native languages and scoring systems shaped by community needs. Because care steps are turned into digital checklists, tracking long-term illnesses becomes more reliable – especially as high blood pressure and excess weight spread. A recent deal worth several million dollars links the company to an insurance provider based in Saudi Arabia, where wellness alerts powered by artificial intelligence now influence how much businesses pay over time.
Midway through the 2026 Arab Health event in Dubai, live screens tracked improved patient results from early test zones – fewer people ending up back in hospitals. Instead of relying on future waves of doctors, some experts believe Dr. Al‑Najjar’s method could reshape how clinics operate across fast-growing cities.
