
A Nigerian nurse and researcher, Rukayat Oluwabukola Olasege, has gained international recognition for work that combines artificial intelligence, cybersecurity and ethical healthcare.
Olasege began her career on hospital wards in Nigeria. Today her published research is used as a reference across global academic and medical circles.
Her key contributions include:
- An ethical framework for creating synthetic patient data that protects privacy while allowing research to continue. The model is now cited as a standard for data governance in Africa and beyond.
- A predictive system that turns “dark data” (unreported or underused clinical information) into tools for better disease surveillance and public health response in resource-limited settings.
- Cybersecurity solutions for hospitals, including self-correcting electronic health records and defences against growing digital threats.
All her work is built on a single principle she repeats in interviews:
“Data and devices must enhance empathy, not replace it.”
Healthcare officials in Nigeria have praised her achievements. One senior Ministry of Health source, speaking anonymously, said:
“Her research proves Nigerian professionals are not just using global health technology – we are writing its rules.”
Olasege’s studies have been published in international journals and are already shaping policy discussions on ethical AI in medicine.
Her work shows that advanced healthcare innovation can come from frontline clinical experience and does not require leaving the continent.
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