Deloitte has launched the Asia Pacific Health Institute in Singapore to advance equitable healthcare access across the region by leveraging technology and innovation. Alongside the launch, it released a report titled Access amplified: technology solutions for improving healthcare access in Asia Pacific, which highlights how digital health tools and policy reforms can help address growing pressure on health systems. The initiative aims to connect Deloitte’s consulting work, internal expertise, and societal investments to support more efficient, accessible, and cost-effective healthcare delivery.
Despite progress in universal health coverage and improved health indicators across Asia Pacific, the region continues to face major disparities in access to care. Factors such as geographic diversity, income inequality, fragmented health systems, workforce shortages, and aging populations contribute to unequal health outcomes. Nearly half of the region’s population is expected to live on less than US$8.30 per day in 2025, further limiting access to quality healthcare for vulnerable groups. The report emphasizes that health outcomes are still largely determined by circumstances rather than medical need, but technology combined with strong policy can help close this gap.
The report presents case studies from countries including Singapore and Indonesia, showing how technologies like telehealth, remote patient monitoring, telerobotics, and smart hospitals are already improving healthcare delivery. These innovations are helping reduce pressure on hospitals, extend care into communities and homes, and improve access for underserved populations. In more developed systems, challenges are increasingly driven by rising demand, workforce shortages, and healthcare inflation rather than access alone.
It outlines four key areas for transformation: demand, supply, cost, and quality. Digital tools can reduce demand through preventive care and early detection, expand supply through AI-enabled systems and automation, lower costs through operational efficiencies, and improve quality through precision medicine and data-driven care. The report argues that integrating these technologies can create more sustainable and responsive healthcare systems.
It also recommends five cross-cutting actions for governments and providers to ensure technology improves rather than deepens inequality. These include improving digital literacy and inclusion, investing in interoperable health data systems, prioritizing prevention and primary care, reskilling the healthcare workforce, and establishing strong governance frameworks for clinical AI. Together, these measures aim to ensure that digital health solutions are safe, inclusive, and widely accessible.
Deloitte leaders emphasized that Asia Pacific’s healthcare systems are at a critical turning point, where rising demand and cost pressures must be addressed through scalable, technology-driven solutions. The new Health Institute will support collaboration with policymakers and healthcare leaders to translate these insights into practical models that can be implemented across the region to improve access and outcomes.







