As part of the activities from the British Council ISPF Research Collaborations Programme, a delegation from the London Digital Twin Research Centre (LDTRC) and South East Asian parnters, led by Professor Huan X Nguyen, conducted a strategic site visit to the University of Oxford to explore the ongoing collaboration opportunities in stroke care, digital health, and neurology.




The delegation included leading health professionals and academic partners from Southeast Asia:
- Prof. Le Ngoc Thanh, President, VNU University of Medicine and Pharmacy, Vietnam
- Prof. Dao Xuan Co, Director, Bach Mai Hospital, Vietnam
- Dr. Mai Duy Ton, Director, Bach Mai Stroke Centre, Vietnam
- Dr. Annisa Ristya Rahmanti, Lecturer, Faculty of Medicine, Public Health, and Nursing, Universitas Gadjah Mada, Indonesia (currently a postdoctoral researcher at LDTRC)
The visit commenced with a meeting hosted by Professor Sir Peter Horby at the Big Data Institute, Nuffield Department of Medicine. Discussions centered around interdisciplinary collaborations at the intersection of AI, data science, and global health.


Following a working lunch at Wolfson College, the delegation attended a seminar with senior neurologists at the John Radcliffe Hospital, including Professor Arjune Sen, Director of the Centre for Global Epilepsy, and Dr. Minh Cong Tran, Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences, University of Oxford. The seminar highlighted Oxford’s acute stroke services and translational research efforts.
The delegation presented ongoing work from the Digital Twin Stroke Care Network, including the development of AI-based stroke care models and policy-relevant use cases. During the seminar, the Oxford University Hospital team shared their experiences in acute stroke pathway (FAST), regional stroke service planning, thrombectomy service and referral systems, and the integration of AI technologies such as Brainomix 360 Stroke (the largest stroke AI network in the UK, serving over 9 million patients). The implementation of Brainomix at Oxford has led to a +280% increase in thrombectomies performed (from 93 to 256 cases) and a 1.6x improvement in functional independence (patients achieving modified Rankin Scale scores of 0–2 increased from 34% to 55%). The Oxfordshire TIA (Transient Ischaemic Attack) service was also presented as a regional model of excellence.
The group later toured the acute stroke and neurology wards, followed by a visit to the Oxford Robotics Institute, where discussions centred on how robotic systems and neurotechnology can support stroke recovery and rehabilitation..
