Access to cardiac care remains one of the most pressing, yet overlooked, crises in global health. In the United States, nearly half of all counties have no practicing cardiologist. In rural regions, that number climbs to a staggering 86 percent. The consequences are predictable yet devastating: delayed diagnoses, missed opportunities for early intervention, and rising burdens of heart failure and valvular disease. Heart disease remains the #1 killer of people in the world.
Yet, sometimes, the most straightforward path forward emerges far from where one expects. A clinical field initiative unfolding in Ghana is demonstrating that with the right technology and training, frontline physicians can step into the widening gap and save lives.
AISAP, an emerging voice in AI-supported point-of-care diagnostics, announced a landmark deployment of its Food and Drug Administration-cleared cardiac diagnosis platform across Ghana. The initiative powers the country’s first nationwide program to train cardiac sonographers and is being deployed in partnership with the G-ACT Foundation. What is unfolding across this West African nation may well offer the most compelling and implementable model for tackling America’s growing cardiology deserts.
When Specialists Are Scarce, Technology Becomes the Essential Partner
Ghana’s health system faces an extraordinary shortage, with fewer than 30 cardiologists serving a population of approximately 35 million. For years, this scarcity placed extraordinary weight on general practitioners, nurses, and emergency teams who lacked the tools or training to perform early cardiac assessments. The AISAP initiative changes that.
“AISAP brings world-class AI diagnostic capability that accelerates training, safeguards quality, and ensures every scan counts,” said Alexis K. Okoh, MD, Executive Chairman of the G-ACT Foundation. “This partnership sets a new standard for accessible cardiovascular care across Ghana, empowering local clinicians to become the new frontline of heart health.”
Clinicians can now access specialist-level interpretation at the bedside. This is more than a clinical advance; it’s a rebalancing of access within care systems. When the tools of expertise reach the people closest to patients, whole nations shift from reactive care to proactive health creation.
A Proven Model for the U.S. Rural Challenge
While the headlines may focus on Ghana now, the unspoken message is aimed squarely at the United States. America’s rural hospitals increasingly rely on traveling specialists, overburdened telecardiology services, or simply do without. AISAP CEO, Adiel Am-Shalom, makes the connection:
“This project represents the heart of our mission, ensuring that access to advanced cardiac care should not depend on geographic location. We are deploying the same FDA-cleared technology trusted by major US hospitals across remote frontlines in Ghana. The model is clear – our cloud-based platform delivers specialist-grade insights to frontline physicians. This deployment is the ultimate proof of concept that AISAP can help solve the diagnostic gap for U.S. rural hospitals facing critical cardiologist shortages.”
Proof of concept is often clinical. Here, it is also a moral imperative. If a middle-income country with constrained resources can deploy expert-level diagnostic capability at scale, what excuse remains for wealthier nations struggling to bridge gaps only widened by geography and policy inertia?
Inside the Technology: When Data Becomes Diagnostic Power
The AISAP Point-of-Care Assisted Diagnosis (POCAD™) platform represents a new generation of applied AI, built not to replace clinicians, but to enable them.
Developed in collaboration with Sheba Medical Center, one of the world’s top hospitals, POCAD has been trained on more than 300,000 echocardiogram studies and 24 million video clips. The platform provides real-time, expert-grade interpretation, along with high-quality guidance for non-specialists. It also provides an Urgency Score that helps clinicians prioritize the sickest patients immediately.
The system does not require proprietary equipment. Almost any portable ultrasound device with an internet connection can transmit images to the secure, HIPAA-compliant cloud.
This accessible specialist knowledge has already made inroads in leading U.S. systems, including Mass General Brigham, Mayo Clinic, Jefferson Health, and Stanford. What makes Ghana’s deployment so compelling is the scale at which the technology is being integrated into clinical pathways, starting with training.
Building an Ecosystem of Capability: The BEAT Program
The Ghana initiative operates through the G-ACT Foundation BEAT Program (Building Echo-Capacity for Access & Triage). It is the nation’s first structured and internationally benchmarked cardiac sonographer training curriculum, developed in collaboration with Ghanaian cardiologists and global academic partners.
“The ability to deploy advanced, life-saving diagnostic capacity directly to our citizens is a monumental step forward for our healthcare system,” said Prof. Yaw A. Wiafe, Associate Professor of Clinical Ultrasound and Echocardiography at Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology. “AISAP’s technology removes traditional barriers to care and offers immediate, tangible results for our population.”
Training programs tend to succeed or fail on three pillars: quality, consistency, and clinical reinforcement. By providing specialist-level diagnostic support directly to trainees, the BEAT Program bypasses traditional barriers and accelerates the development of a new cadre of cardiac professionals. It creates not only capability but confidence.
A Future Defined by Shared Solutions
Ghana’s experience is a striking reminder that innovation need not follow wealth. It follows will, collaboration, and a refusal to accept that a shortage of specialists must translate into a shortage of care.
In many ways, AISAP efforts reflect a shift taking shape across global health: solutions once designed for high-resource environments are being refined in low-resource settings and then reapplied to mature health systems that need new pathways to scale.
“The very first patient we scanned in Ghana was a 46-year-old woman, and her life was immediately changed when our platform quickly identified severe heart failure and multiple valve diseases. She was transferred for urgent care. This outcome is exactly why we built this technology,” shares Adiel Am-Shalom, AISAP co-founder and CEO of AISAP. “We are now focused on scaling US implementations to ensure our proven, FDA-cleared technology helps even more people and provides access to critically needed care nationwide.”
For the United States, where rural communities are growing older, sicker and more medically isolated, the lesson is unmistakable. Technology that equalizes expertise is no longer optional. It is central to ensure that ZIP codes do not determine survival.
As Ghana builds its next generation of cardiac frontline clinicians, the implications stretch far beyond national borders. This initiative demonstrates what is possible when innovation and intention align, and when the goal is not just to advance diagnostics, but to advance equity.
Ghana is charting a course that others, including the U.S., can follow. AISAP deployment is not just a technology story. It serves as a reminder that health is a shared human endeavor and that the most effective ideas in medicine are those that bring care closer to those who need it most.


