FESZ Digital Advisor Visits Healthcare+ Expo Taiwan, Seeking Breakthroughs Through Global Partnerships in Smart Healthcare and Digital Transformation

2025-07-11

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Hungary, despite its solid foundation in medical device manufacturing, is struggling to keep pace with Western Europe in healthcare innovation due to a limited domestic market and constrained R&D investment. Over the past decade, more than 8,000 Hungarian healthcare professionals have left the country, further straining an already overstretched medical system. As internal resources tighten and external technologies advance rapidly, Hungary’s medical sector is urgently seeking breakthroughs through global partnerships in smart healthcare.

In 2024, Daniel Kapusy, Digital Health Advisor for the Hungarian Health Equipment Suppliers Association (FESZ), visited Taiwan to attend the Healthcare+ Expo Taiwan. His visit was more than a routine industry exchange-it underscored Taiwan’s growing reputation as a global partner of choice for digital transformation, thanks to its strengths in both software and hardware integration.


Daniel Kapusy, Digital Health Advisor for the Hungarian Health Equipment Suppliers Association (FESZ), shared the immediate and cost-effective benefits of process optimization technologies, as a practical solution for Hungary's healthcare challenges.

At the Expo, Kapusy was impressed by Taiwan’s integration of innovative technologies and smart healthcare, highlighting Asia’s leadership in digital health transformation. He specifically pointed to the application of process intelligence and process mining technologies, which can help healthcare institutions streamline administrative workflows, reduce patient wait times, and minimize resource waste-ultimately boosting operational efficiency.

Kapusy cited a case from the UK’s National Health Service (NHS), noting that such technologies enabled a reduction of 5,300 patient waitlist cases in just eight weeks, saving £2.8 million annually. “Instead of chasing high-risk, high-cost AI diagnostic tools, it’s more effective to start with process optimization, where results are immediate,” he said. For Hungary, adopting these solutions could directly address challenges caused by staff shortages and inefficient administration.


Daniel Kapusy discussed with Taiwan C-level professionals around smart healthcare technologies, digital health platforms, and potential business ventures between the two regions.

Hungary and Taiwan share strong potential for collaboration in smart healthcare, digital health platforms, and medical device development—particularly in optimizing clinical pathways and operational efficiency, where Taiwan’s experience provides valuable insights.

This exchange signals more than a one-off interaction; it marks a repositioning of Taiwan as a highly attractive hub for smart healthcare partnerships, especially for Central and Eastern European countries. By combining their respective strengths and deepening cooperation, Hungary and Taiwan could jointly pursue opportunities in data-driven healthcare, co-develop medical devices, and optimize healthcare systems-opening new frontiers in the global medical market.