 AI is a frontier issue in health sector, as well as in many others, and in the era of sustainable development it is important that we make full use of the potential of AI to find solutions to address the multiple goals in the 17 goals of SDG. Now, more specifically for health, goal number three is on health. How do we promote health and well-being of people? And AI has great potential, but having said that, I also need to encourage people to be a bit more cautious with AI because we don't have answers to all the questions and we don't even know to answer all the questions. So I mean, you know, we need to find the right balance. Well, I think the AI summit organized by ITU is extremely important because it provides a neutral platform where experts, be it in computer science, you know, AI experts or in other health sectors, as well as civil society and the industry, come together to share experiences, best practices, and lessons learned. The reason I'm saying this is because AI is a very cross cutting issue. It touches many disciplines. The fact that this platform gives a place where people can come together to learn from each other. Really amazing. Now in health sector, truly, I think AI can help us to mine the multiple databases and help us to detect patterns of, you know, overuse or underuse. In a way, at the system level, it helps us to assess the performance of health systems, whether or not a certain doctor or a hospital is over surfacing or under surfacing patients. Now at the, you know, individual level, it can empower individual to make healthy choices and to stay healthy and happy. At the, you know, government level, it can help us to also make proper decisions in terms of our health investment into the right area that will yield the highest return on investment. On the doctor and the nurses level, I mean, you know, AI has a potential to organize data, structure data, and simplify processes to help doctors and nurses to make decisions. Now we must recognize the context for healthcare decision is extremely complex. We need to know, for example, if AI, I mean, properly programmed intelligent machine, if they make a diagnosis, a wrong diagnosis, mind you, can we sue an intelligent machine? So these are regulatory issues that we need to address because doctors, nurses, as well as the training of doctors and nurses and medical institutions are accredited institutions. So in order to reap the potential of AI, we also need to look at the regulatory issues as well as the ethical dilemmas. My worry is that the potential of AI is good, but it may further increase the inequity between the rich and the not so rich countries. Until and unless, through the ITU and many other partners, we can democratize and promote the access of internet to all countries on an equal basis. The potential of AI is too far away for many developing countries, but we should not give up. We have to continue to explore the potential of AI.