AdipoLABs Expands Asia-Pacific Presence Through University Partnership to Advance Healthcare Innovation
TL;DR
AdipoLABs and Red & Blue Co. gain a strategic advantage in the ASEAN MedTech market by partnering with University of Cyberjaya to train students and validate their Pain Bot device through clinical research.
The partnership establishes a structured internship program, clinical research studies, and device donations to transfer knowledge and enhance skills in pain detection and treatment technologies.
This collaboration improves healthcare outcomes by training future professionals with advanced technologies and generating evidence-based research to benefit patients across Malaysia and ASEAN.
The inventor of the Pain Bot device, Professor Dr. Yoo Seung-mo, will serve as an adjunct professor providing hands-on training to University of Cyberjaya students.
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AdipoLABs Co., Ltd. and Red & Blue Co., Ltd. from Korea, together with their Malaysian subsidiary AdipoLABs Healthcare (M) Sdn Bhd, have officially opened a new regional office for Asia-Pacific in Malaysia. This strategic expansion aims to strengthen the company's leadership in non-invasive healthcare and build a robust MedTech ecosystem across Malaysia and ASEAN. As a research and development-focused medical company, its presence is expected to drive knowledge transfer, foster R&D collaboration, provide industry-standard training, and enhance the country's preventive healthcare capabilities.
To commemorate this milestone, the company signed two Memoranda of Understanding with the University of Cyberjaya, formalizing a partnership to advance healthcare innovation, clinical research, and talent development. Mr. Han Sung-ho, CEO of AdipoLABs Co., Ltd., stated that by uniting hyperthermia technology with local expertise and academic rigor, the collaboration will expedite the adoption of advanced solutions and improve patient outcomes worldwide, serving as a blueprint for international healthcare partnerships.
A cornerstone of the first MoU is a comprehensive internship program with UoC's Physiotherapy programs under the Faculty of Health, offering six-month placements and potential job opportunities. Students from the Faculty of Health will gain hands-on expertise with AdipoLABs' Pain Bot device, enhancing their skills in pain detection and treatment, while students from the School of Biomedical Engineering will support technical operations, strengthening after-sales service and device maintenance. As part of the partnership, AdipoLABs will implement a strategic client engagement initiative where interns may be placed at client facilities to demonstrate device effectiveness and provide on-site support.
The collaboration also extends to clinical research, with UoC professors and students conducting studies on various AdipoLABs medical devices, generating evidence-based insights to be published in reputable journals and scientifically validating the technologies. Dr. Isaac R. Joseph, Director of AdipoLABs Healthcare (M) Sdn Bhd, emphasized that this partnership offers UoC students invaluable hands-on experience with technologies like Pain Bot while expanding clinical research to enhance pain management solutions for patients across Malaysia and ASEAN.
In a parallel effort to advance physiotherapy education, AdipoLABs Malaysia, Red & Blue Co., Ltd., and UoC signed a second MoU focused on knowledge transfer and medical device donation. Under this agreement, AdipoLABs Malaysia will donate a Pain Bot unit to UoC, giving students access to cutting-edge pain detection and treatment technology. AdipoLABs, a Ministry of Health-registered medical-device establishment under the Medical Device Authority, anchors this collaboration with proven regulatory credibility and a strong commitment to quality and innovation.
Professor Dr. David Whitford, Vice-Chancellor of the University of Cyberjaya, noted that AdipoLABs' partnership is a direct investment in the next generation of healthcare professionals, providing students with international-standard tools and real-world innovation that will shape their confidence, competence, and future careers. Further strengthening this collaboration, Professor Dr. Yoo Seung-mo from South Korea, the inventor of the Pain Bot, will serve as an Adjunct Professor at UoC, providing on-site training and ongoing remote mentorship to ensure students receive the highest level of expertise in utilizing the technology.
This partnership represents a significant development for Malaysia's healthcare sector, combining international medical technology with local academic excellence to create tangible benefits for students, patients, and the broader MedTech industry. The collaboration addresses critical needs in talent development, clinical validation of emerging technologies, and regional healthcare innovation, positioning Malaysia as a hub for advanced medical research and education in Southeast Asia. For more information, visit https://www.cyberjaya.edu.my or https://adipolabs-msia.com.
Curated from NewMediaWire


