Healthcare engagements sit at the intersection of three pressures that few other sectors combine in one workload: patient-privacy law, clinical-research ethics, and 24/7 operational uptime. A platform that fails any of these fails them all. We design healthcare platforms with those constraints as first-class architectural inputs.
What we do for healthcare organisations
- Hospital information systems and EMR modernization — replatforming legacy HIS estates onto container infrastructure with documented downgrade paths for life-critical workflows.
- Patient-data sovereignty. End-to-end encryption, key custody under your organisation’s control, immutable audit trails, lawful-basis tagging for every data class.
- Clinical-research data platforms — lakehouse architectures with explicit consent-and-purpose enforcement, anonymisation pipelines, lineage that traces every derived dataset back to its source consents.
- AI-augmented clinical decision support — identity-bound, audit-logged AI for bounded use cases (triage, document understanding, prior-art search) with explicit human-in-the-loop gates. We don’t deploy autonomous clinical AI.
- Identity for clinicians, patients, and research staff — differentiated identity flows (smart-card / SAML for clinical staff, OIDC + MFA for patients, federated SSO for research collaborators) governed centrally.
- Public-health surveillance and reporting for government health authorities and international agencies (WHO-aligned tooling, real-time signal pipelines, geospatial visualisations).
What makes healthcare engagements distinct
Compared with banking, healthcare engagements involve broader data classes (clinical, genomic, behavioural, billing) with different lawful bases and retention regimes for each. The audit trail is per-class, not per-system. Documentation has to survive both regulatory inspection and clinical-handover scenarios where a different team picks up operations.
Our healthcare experience includes work with hospitals, research institutions, public-health agencies, and international health bodies (BIRDEM, WHO-aligned programmes, Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics health-data programmes).