AUTHOR=Henry James Andrew TITLE=Population health management genomic new-born screens and multi-omics intercepts JOURNAL=Frontiers in Artificial Intelligence VOLUME=Volume 7 - 2024 YEAR=2025 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/artificial-intelligence/articles/10.3389/frai.2024.1496942 DOI=10.3389/frai.2024.1496942 ISSN=2624-8212 ABSTRACT=IntroductionThe Population Health Management (PHM) Genomic Newborn Screens (GNBS) and Multi-Omics Intercepts for Human Phenotype Ontology (HPO) using Federated Data Platforms (FDP) represent a groundbreaking innovation in global health. This reform, supported by the UK’s Genomic Medical Services (GMS) through “The Generation Study,” aims to significantly reduce infant mortality by identifying and managing over 200 rare diseases from birth, paving the way for personalised health planning.MethodsUsing an ecosystem approach, this study evaluates a diverse pangenome to predict health outcomes or confirm diagnoses prior to symptomatic manifestations. GNBS standardises care by integrating diagnostic techniques such as blood spot analysis and full blood cell diagnostics to stratify risk. The approach enhances the understanding of rare diseases in primary care medicine, with biomedical and haematology diagnoses re-evaluated. Scientific proof of concept and fit-for-purpose technology align multi-omics in pre-eXams (X = Gen AI).RecommendationsThe Digital Regulation Service (DRS) assembles an agile group of experts to enhance medical science through human phenotype ontology (HPO) for precise disease segmentation, scheduling accurate eXam intercepts where needed. This team strategically plans regulation services for digital HPO exam assurance and implements Higher Expert Medical Science Safety (HEMSS) frameworks. The DRS is responsible for overseeing gene, oligonucleotide, and recombinant protein intercepts; commissioning blood pathology HPO exam intercepts; and monitoring preliminary exams with advanced imaging techniques.DiscussionIn pursuit of excellence in PHM of HPO, HEMSS with Agile Group Development leverages the Genomic Newborn Screens (GNBS) and multi-omics to create personalised health plans integrated with NHS England Genomics and AI-driven DRS. The discourse extends to examining GNBS predictors and intercepts, focusing on their impact on public health and patient safety. Discussions encompass structured HPO knowledge addressing newborn health, ethical considerations, family privacy, and the benefits and limitations of pre-exam screenings and life exam intercepts. These debates involve stakeholders in adopting HPO-enhanced clinical pathways through Alliances for Health Systems Networking-Genomic Enterprise Partnerships (AHSN-GEP).Conclusion“The Generation Study” represents a paradigm in digital child health management using an HPO-X-Gen-AI framework, transitioning from trusted research to evidence-based discovery. This approach sets a standard for personalised healthcare practices, incorporating ontology risk stratification and future-ready analytics as outlined in the NHS Constitution. The discourse on higher expert medical science safety governance will continue in the forthcoming manuscript, “PHM Fit Lifecycles in Future Analytics,” which will further explore developing localised health solutions for “Our Future Health.”