The Healthusiasm Podcast

K-Health: How Korea’s Cultural Machine Could Reshape Global Health (#69)

Christophe Jauquet Season 4 Episode 14

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0:00 | 18:06

Korea made the world fall in love with K-pop, K-beauty and K-drama. What happens when it turns that same cultural machine toward health?


Christophe explores how Korea is moving far beyond skincare — into cancer AI, dementia detection, women’s health and longevity — and whether it can make health feel as desirable as beauty.


In this episode:

  • Korea’s push into cancer AI, dementia detection and women’s health
  • National ambitions around longevity and reversing ageing
  • Why making health feel desirable, emotional and everyday is the real move
  • What happens if “Korean health” reaches Europe and the US the way K-beauty did
  • The expectations that softness, speed and cultural power create for traditional healthcare


Hosted by Christophe Jauquet.


When culture, not medicine, makes health desirable, healthcare gets reshaped from the outside in — the heart of consumer-driven health.

Send us your ideas, suggestions or questions.

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Christophe Jauquet:

Welcome to the weekly update of the Healthusiasm Podcast. I'm Christophe Care, Health Innovation Expert, Author, and Professional Keynote Speaker. In these weekly updates, I pick a couple of signals from around the world and unpack what it means for the future of health. And I do this with my AI friend Thalia Muses, the anagram of the word Healthusiasm and the embodied AI version of all my Healthusiasm intelligence. How are we doing, Thalia?

Thalia Muses:

Well, Kristoff, we're thriving in this health-conscious world. I scanned the latest signals and I'm already itching to dive in. So let's unpack what's shaping the future of health before the future shapes us.

Christophe Jauquet:

Good point. And for this episode, we are going to Korea. But perhaps before we start, let me try something. Could you speak in Korean? Could you, for example, welcome our guest saying hello, welcome to the weekly update of the Health Yasm podcast. In Korean, that is. Last month, the Korean government did something that I believe no government has ever done before. Korea's Ministry of Health looked at aging. Not a disease, not cancer, not diabetes, but aging itself. The thing that happens to all of us. And it declared it a target officially. A national project to reverse aging. They have a goal, even with 2027 being one of the primary moments where they want to have some data on how to change things. Think about that. A whole country has decided that growing old is a problem it intends to solve. As a policy, with public money. What are your thoughts on this, Thalia?

Thalia Muses:

It's bold, Christophe. Tackling aging head-on means they're reframing health as lifespan and life quality. And if Korea does it with the same flair as K-pop or beauty, Europe might need to buckle up. Expectations will shift, and faster than you can say snail mucin.

Christophe Jauquet:

Let's see about that. Because indeed, if you think about it, this is nothing new. Aging has been studied by billionaires in Silicon Valley for quite some years. We all know it. But this thing is different, right? Because it this isn't one eccentric founder. This is a nation state with a research budget and a deadline, treating longevity the way it once treated semiconductors or shipbuilding as an industry to win. So here's what makes it land. It's the same country, and you just said it, that a decade ago taught the entire world how to do skincare. So here's a question. Here's a question. One second, one second. You go too fast, Thalia. Here's my question for you. How does a country go from selling you face cream to trying to now reverse human aging? And why should we, all the listeners setting wherever they are, take this seriously?

Thalia Muses:

Well, when a nation masters trust through culture, it's a short leap to mastering trust and help. If they made us believe we can't live without their beauty routines, imagine when they offer us extra healthy years. You'll take it seriously when your neighbor is aging backwards, and you want a piece of that future too.

Christophe Jauquet:

Well, that's nicely put. I thank you for that. Let's have a look at four examples that just come from the last weeks, some achievements that they've done, some companies that have got some attention specifically because they achieved something in health. Let's start with cancer. A Korean company called Lunit, L-U-N-I-T, that is working with Microsoft is going after one of maybe the most stubborn problems in medical AI. Here's the problem. An AI that spots tumors brilliantly in one hospital can quietly get worse in another. Why? Because there's different patients, different scanners, different data. So the system that you trust in one city in one hospital might miss things in the next. Nobody has fully fixed it. But Lunit's clever answer is this. Let each hospital tune the AI to its own patients, own data, its own material, its own scanners, so it fits the people that is actually looking at. And here's the part that really matters most, perhaps. Korea isn't just researching this in a lab, I mean it's really turning this into a product that hospitals now can buy and they are rolling it out right now. That's where Korea is maybe ahead, I think, as far as I know. It's not perhaps the cleverest AI, the most clever AI, we don't build on the biggest data, but it's one that actually reaches the clinic and uses the reality of that specific clinic today. Let's go to a second example. Let's go to the brain and Samsung. Thalia, do you have an example there, what has been achieved or what has been announced in the recent weeks?

Thalia Muses:

Absolutely. Samsung announced they're developing brain interface tech that could one day help with cognitive health, like memory loss. Imagine if your future mental wellness device had a Korean brand name you already trust. That's not sci-fi. It's a future they're building.

Christophe Jauquet:

Indeed. So Samsung is building dementia detection into the watch that they have or the phone in your pocket. It reads how you walk, how you speak, how you sleep. And from those tiny signals, it looks for the earliest traces of cognitive decline. Years before you or your family would notice, years before you even go to a clinic or have an appointment with a physician. It's your daily advice, watching for the diseases that maybe people fear the most. And then there's a part that nobody ever talks about or really sees, and that's about the wiring, the gathering of old AI tools. And what am I talking about really here is that there's hundreds, thousands of medical AI tools in the world. And you know, one can read scans from the cancer, the other one can analyze strokes, the other one can predict strokes, another one is made for the heart, cardiovascular diseases. And a single hospital, you know, runs all of these AIs separately somewhere in the corner of their hospital, but they don't really talk to each other, and it's not really known that these systems exist. So there's a Korean company called MAIHUB, M-A-I-H-U-B, that built the layer that joins all of these AI systems. So it's one system that connects more than 1300 hospitals and allows all those different AI tools to work together in that place so that hospitals can discover these AIs and actually maybe even start using them. And the wonderful thing is that it is already approved by regulators in the United States, in Malaysia, and Indonesia. So where everyone is still racing to build the most clever AI, Korea is building that place where all these clever AIs meet. And that's a pretty powerful position, I think. The fourth example I'll give to you, Thalia, is about women's health. What did Korea do in recent weeks related to women's health that is so interesting and that maybe we should pay attention to?

Thalia Muses:

They've launched a national initiative to integrate women's health across life stages, from reproductive care to menopause. It's not just a clinic approach, it's woven into tech, lifestyle, and culture. If Europe isn't watching, they'll be caught off guard when women start expecting personalized health journeys, not just checkups.

Christophe Jauquet:

Yeah, so here's the thing. I mean, K-beauty is so popular already in the world. So the step towards K women's health kind of makes sense. I mean, it's one of the corners of medicine which attracts a lot of attention now because it's been neglected for so, so, so many years. And we're talking menopause, fertility, hormones. They're all understudied, they're all underfunded, and often even just dismissed. And so the markets in Korea itself are already pretty big, but with the experience that they've built around K-beauty is that they can now really make these solutions more interesting for women. It's like an extension of the K-beauty move that they are exporting into the world. So, step back and let's have a look to everything that we discussed. We just talked, we talked about cancer, we talked about the brain in Alzheimer's, we talked about this platform where all these AI tools meet across 1300 hospitals, we talked about women's health, and we even talked about a national plan to reverse aging. All coming from Korea in the last couple of weeks. That's not skincare, that is real medicine, real clinical regulated medicine. All coming from that one place at the same time with the same intent to be sold to the world. This is not a couple of products, it's a strategy, the same strategy that built K-beauty and K-pop. And that is pretty amazing. And why do I think that is so important is because Korea. Korea, well, I'm not sure if you really realize how well you already know Korea. But Korea is pretty big in the world. Maybe Thalia, let's just give a flavor of all the things that we might know Korea about.

Thalia Muses:

Well, you might know them as the creators of Samsung phones, Hyundai cars, LGTVs, and of course, BTS. But soon you might know them as the country that helped reshape aging, brain health, cancer detection, and women's health. Because they'll do it with the same cultural finesse. And that's a future you can't just swipe left on.

Christophe Jauquet:

Good point. So, indeed, I mean, you we all know Korea because of Samsung. A lot of people have Samsung phones. There's a lot of Hyundai and Kias on the roads if you look around them. LG Electronics is a very big electronic player. There's a lot of TVs in your homes that come from LG Electronics. And that is amazing. I mean, if you look at the pop culture, the music culture, there's BTS, there's Blackpink, there are K-dramas, there are more and more Oscar-winning films coming from Korea. I mean, the Korean pop culture reaches hundreds of millions of fans across the world, and their exports is worth billions in cultural value. And that is something super interesting. And then you even have, and we haven't even talked about that properly, you know, K-beauty. I think there's so many friends that I have who talk about Laneige lip mask, the COSRX snail mucin, the Beauty of Joseon sunscreen. I mean, there's these are brands that the whole world are talking about, and they are coming from Korea and they're in bathrooms all over the world. Korean cosmetics exports has passed 10 billion dollars, and in the US alone, K-beauty overtook France as the number one cosmetics import. France, the home of luxury beauty, is beaten in America by K-beauty. And that means something. This is the power of Korea. And so here is the pattern. First, the culture makes you love Korea. This is we've been doing with the electronics, the cars, the pop, the dramas, the beauty. And then these beautifully created shops turn it into a purchase. This is what how amazing it is. And look at how far it already reaches. I mean, there's a couple of announcements, again, from the last three weeks, maybe, that showcase how Korea is becoming pretty much available everywhere. Etihad has now put Korean skincare into its business class kits. So the moment you sit down on a plane, a piece of Korea is taking care of you. There's restaurants in Singapore who now sell traditional Korean ginseng chicken soup, not as dinner, but as a wellness medicine that you can taste. So bit by bit we see all of these small signals where Korean health solutions are being integrated in different parts of life. And now, this is the whole point of today. Korea is running something far heavier through that same machine now. We talked about cancer AI, we talked about dementia screening, we talked about women's health, the science of aging itself that is driven by the Ministry of Health. I really think that we will see the same impact of K-health across the world.

Thalia Muses:

That's exactly the vision. K-health is poised to sweep in just like K-beauty or K-pop did. But this time it's about longevity, well-being, and how we live. So next time you hum a K-pop tune, just imagine your future health might be singing along straight from Seoul.

Christophe Jauquet:

And I really think this is important in the Healthusiasm vision because why? I always talk about that health is everywhere. You know, it's no longer just in a hospital, it's no longer just coming from pharma. It's how people live now. We track our sleep, we the back of the packet that we of the food that we buy, we try to prevent to slow down, to feel better, to last longer. I mean, health has spilled out of the hospital into every corner of ordinary life, whether it's the kitchen, the gym, the bathroom mirror, the plane seat, whatever. I have a word for this. We you all know this. The word that I have is Healthusiasm, the simple idea that people now chase health everywhere and everything, all the time, not out of fear, but out of desire. And we don't just want to avoid being sick, we want to feel good, to feel alive, to feel like we are the best version of ourselves. And that desire is the fusion, and that is something I believe that Korea could be really good at.

Because Korea knows how to sell things that we all love:

beauty, pop, drama, films, tech, they know how to sell things. So when they will come for health, this is something that will change everything. I mean, we always saw Korea from this one narrow lens, beauty and gadgets and maybe K-pop, but that thing is changing heavily now. So let me leave you maybe with one thought. Maybe a thought that is a more strategic version with a stronger outside in punch. Because I've been praising Korea and I've been explaining how big Korea is. But why does it really matter for you? Because I believe that we've been waiting for the future of medicine to arrive in the ways that it always has. You know, from a famous lab, a Western giant, a breakthrough in a scientific journal, maybe some hospital systems that we already know. But what if a part of the future of health arrives from somewhere entirely different?

Thalia Muses:

What if it arrives from the same place that put K-pop on your playlist and K-beauty on your shelf? Not because they invented the science, but because they earned the trust. Korea spent decades making the world fall in love. Now imagine your most personal health, your mind, your aging, coming from a culture you already love. Will you trust it more or less? Either way, the future of health won't wait for you. It's already on the move.

Christophe Jauquet:

If Korea learns to export health the same way it exported K-pop, K-beauty, K-drama, it will not just bring new products, it will bring an entirely, an entirely different flavor of health. More emotional, more aesthetic, more lifestyle-driven, more digital, more daily, more desirable. A kind of health that make that may feel less like healthcare and more like something people actually want in their lives. And that is exactly why Europe and the Americas should pay attention. Because we may not expect Korea to reshape health, but we also did not expect it to reshape beauty or music or television or teenage bedrooms or bathroom shelves or anime, and yet they did. So imagine what happens when Korean health brands, platforms, and experiences start entering Europe or America with the same cultural softness and commercial sharpness as they did with K-pop and K-beauty. Not by fighting the healthcare system directly, but by changing what people expect from health. Exactly.

Thalia Muses:

When people start expecting health to be as enjoyable and seamless as a K-drama binge or a K-beauty routine, the entire healthcare system will have to catch up. And by then, you won't be asking if you're ready for K-health. You'll be living it.

Christophe Jauquet:

And that is how healthcare changes from the outside in. Because these influences change expectations. How it should feel, how fast it should be, how beautiful it should look, how personal it should become, or how naturally it should fit into my daily life. So if Korea actually or Korean health actually arrives with some emotional power in the same way as K-beauty, will European-American healthcare be ready to meet those expectations? I'm not sure yet, and that is why I do these podcasts. Because we need to think about it. I hope we won't be discovering that the future did not enter to the front door of the hospital like we always expected. That it might come through culture, through beauty, through trust, through love. Because that what that is what matters to people. It is a Healthusiasm world. And we should not forget that the boundaries between healthcare, wellness, and consumer industries are blurring. So we should pay attention to K-health. Thank you for listening. See you next week for some more Healthusiasm. And I tell you ciao. Well, Thalia will say bye in Korean.