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MedEdge MEA > Opinion > From Quick Fix to Critical Risk: Why WhatsApp No Longer Works for Healthcare in the UAE and Saudi Arabia
Opinion

From Quick Fix to Critical Risk: Why WhatsApp No Longer Works for Healthcare in the UAE and Saudi Arabia

Judit Sharon
Judit Sharon
Published: November 25, 2025
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8 Min Read
Quick Fix to Critical Risk
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At HIMSS this year, one topic kept surfacing in private conversations among hospital leaders from the UAE and Saudi Arabia: โ€œWeโ€™re still using WhatsApp for clinical messaging, but itโ€™s starting to feel risky.โ€

Contents
  • Why Hospitals Defaulted to WhatsApp
  • The Risks and Compliance Gaps of WhatsApp in Clinical Care
  • Why the Shift Is Happening Now
  • What to Look for in a WhatsApp Alternative
  • The Future of Clinical Messaging in MEA
  • Conclusion: Itโ€™s Time to Rethink Your WhatsApp Strategy
          • Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not represent the positions of MedEdge MEA

What began years ago as a practical, no-cost solution has now become a source of growing unease. Administrators shared stories of critical alerts being buried in group chats, nurses unsure if their messages were ever seen, and patient photos automatically syncing into personal family photo albums. Almost everyone shared the same concern: while WhatsApp is fast and convenient, it was never designed for healthcare purposes.

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That concern reflects a broader reality across the Middle East and Africa: WhatsApp has become a clinical crutch, but one that no longer feels secure or sustainable.

Why Hospitals Defaulted to WhatsApp

In many parts of the Middle East and Africa, WhatsApp became the de facto clinical messaging tool for simple reasons. It works on every phone, requires no training, and is free. For hospitals with tight budgets and limited IT staff, that mix of free, simple, and universal access was impossible to turn down.

Yet the very factors that made WhatsApp attractive at firstโ€”its speed and ubiquityโ€”are now the same factors making it dangerous as hospitals scale and digitalize.

The Risks and Compliance Gaps of WhatsApp in Clinical Care

While WhatsApp offers speed and convenience, frontline staff and administrators report recurring problems that compromise the quality of care and compliance. These four risks highlight why the app is increasingly viewed as unsafe for clinical communication:

  • Missed or delayed alerts: Critical notifications get buried in chat noise, making it challenging to separate urgent cases from routine updates and causing dangerous delays in care.
  • No on-call visibility: Without integration to duty rosters, staff members message multiple colleagues at once, wasting minutes and adding stress during time-sensitive situations.
  • Data leakage: Patient photos, test results, and notes are often stored on personal devices, which can sync to cloud backups or family photo libraries, creating serious privacy risks.
  • Lack of accountability: With no audit logs, escalation paths, or delivery confirmations, hospitals cannot verify if critical messages were received, acknowledged, or acted upon.

These practical risks are compounded by a larger issue: compliance.

Globally, WhatsApp is not considered compliant with healthcare regulations, such as HIPAA or GDPR. And the same principle applies in the Middle East. The UAE enforces strict requirements under the Federal Health Data Law and the regulations of Dubai Healthcare City. Saudi Arabiaโ€™s Personal Data Protection Law (PDPL) requires similar safeguards.

WhatsAppโ€™s end-to-end encryption is not enough. It lacks centralized data control, role-based permissions, secure archives, and the ability to separate personal from professional use. In the language of regulators, it fails the test of โ€œreasonable security.โ€ For hospital administrators, that translates into regulatory exposure and reputational risk.

Why the Shift Is Happening Now

After years of relying on WhatsApp, healthcare leaders are reassessing its risks. Several powerful forces are accelerating the move toward secure, compliant platforms designed specifically for clinical care. Governments across the region are investing heavily in modernization, from electronic health records to AI-driven diagnostics, and secure communication is increasingly seen as a critical foundation of that transformation. At the same time, patient trust is at stake. Even small, accidental privacy breaches can erode confidence, and providers know they cannot afford missteps that jeopardize loyalty. Finally, peer pressure is mounting. As leading hospitals adopt compliant communication platforms, others feel compelled to follow, not wanting to appear behind in modernization. Taken together, these factors explain why hospital leaders are seeking purpose-built solutions rather than settling for quick fixes.

What to Look for in a WhatsApp Alternative

If WhatsApp is no longer enough, what should replace it? The answer isnโ€™t another generic chat app. Itโ€™s a clinical communication platform built for use in healthcare.

The most effective clinical communication platforms share six critical capabilities:

  1. Escalation workflows: Automated routing ensures urgent alerts never go unanswered and guarantees timely responses.
  2. Role-based messaging: Staff can message an on-call role like โ€œcardiologistโ€ instead of guessing who is available, ensuring the right clinician receives the alert.
  3. On-call visibility: Real-time access to on-call schedules helps staff instantly see who is available, improving coordination and response times across care teams.
  4. Dedicated clinical inbox: A secure inbox keeps patient communications separate from personal chats and accessible without distraction.
  5. Full compliance: Platforms must align with HIPAA, GDPR, and local laws such as the UAE Federal Health Data Law and Saudi PDPL.
  6. System integration: Connections to EHRs, nurse call systems, and lab alerts streamline workflows and reduce errors.

Together, these features create a communication environment designed for the realities of clinical care. Hospitals that adopt them future-proof their operations against risk and regulatory change.

The Future of Clinical Messaging in MEA

Secure clinical communication builds the patient trust modern healthcare depends on while also improving care delivery and operational reliability. Its impact goes far beyond basic messaging and reaches into the heart of healthcare delivery.

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Quicker response times ensure urgent messages reach the correct clinician in a matter of seconds. Visibility into the on-call team allows staff to immediately identify who is available, improving coordination and preventing delays in patient care. Centralized messaging prevents redundancy, eliminates wasted time, and avoids the chaos that ensues from disconnected chat channels. Hospitals can be confident their communications policies are in compliance, protecting private information and limiting legal risk. Additionally, strong data security builds institutional trust with patients, staff, and regulators, positioning hospitals as modern, coordinated, and responsible providers.

Conclusion: Itโ€™s Time to Rethink Your WhatsApp Strategy

The era of WhatsApp for clinical communication is coming to an end. For hospitals across the UAE and Saudi Arabia, the real question is not if they will move to secure platforms, but how quickly.

Those who act now will not only reduce risk, but also align with the regionโ€™s digital health ambitionsโ€”and most importantly, give clinicians the confidence that every message, every alert, and every patient matters.

By Judit Sharon, CEO and Founder, OnPage Corporationย 

Judit Sharon is the CEO and founder of OnPage Corporation, a provider of an advanced, secure critical communication and collaboration platform designed to ensure that urgent alerts are never missed. In her role, Judit oversees all aspects of the business, from driving product innovation and enhancing customer success to spearheading strategic growth initiatives.โ€ฏโ€ฏ

Juditโ€™s LinkedIn Profile: https://www.linkedin.com/in/juditsharon/ย 

Judit Sharon, CEO and Founder, OnPage Corporationย 
Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not represent the positions of MedEdge MEA

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