Thai tech firm JTS moves into AI-powered primary care

Thai technology company Jasmine Technology Solution (JTS) is pushing into digital healthcare with a strategic stake in ULTIMED, an AI-powered primary care platform, as the listed firm looks to extend its technology infrastructure expertise into the medical sector.

ULTIMED’s platform is built around what the company calls an AI-Native Clinic Operating System — a fully integrated suite covering the breadth of primary care, from appointment booking and electronic medical records through to AI-assisted diagnosis, digital prescriptions, telemedicine consultations, and pharmaceutical delivery. Rather than digitising individual parts of the clinical workflow, the system is designed to connect every stage of the patient journey under a single platform.

The company takes a broad definition of primary care, positioning itself across health promotion and disease prevention as well as treatment and rehabilitation. Its near-term expansion plan targets ten clinic branches within two years, with the model built to scale beyond that initial footprint.

For JTS, the move represents a deliberate step beyond its core digital infrastructure business. The company has framed the ULTIMED partnership as part of a longer-term ambition to build an integrated AI ecosystem that extends from computing infrastructure into applied healthcare. Thai AI developer Looloo Technology is also involved in the collaboration, creating scope for joint innovation across the platform.

Author

  • Matthew Brady

    Matt is an award-winning storyteller, writer, and communicator currently based in Riyadh.

    A native Englishman, his career has led him to diverse locations including China, Hong Kong, Iraq, Malaysia, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE.

    In addition to founding HealthTechAsia, Matt is a co-founder of the non-profit Pul Alliance for Digital Health and Equity.

    In a former life, he oversaw editorial coverage for Arab Health, Asia Health, Africa Health, and other key events.

    In 2021, he won a Medical Travel Media Award, organised by Malaysia Healthcare Travel Council, and a Guardian Student Media Award in 2000.

    View all posts

Discover more from HealthTechAsia

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.