Traditional epidemic intelligence relies heavily on human epidemiologists for data interpretation and reporting, which makes it resource intensive, slow to respond, and vulnerable to variability in professional expertise. To overcome these limitations, we propose an expanded conceptual epidemic intelligence quadripartite framework that extends the classical trinity of (1) surveillance, (2) risk evaluation, and (3) early warning with a fourth pillar, (4) decision support and intervention optimization through AI agents. Acting as 24/7 digital epidemiologists, multiagent systems can integrate heterogeneous signals from multisource surveillance systems, conduct contextual risk evaluation and adaptive forecasting, generate tailored early warnings, and provide actionable recommendations for targeted control—closing the loop between detection and response. Embedding interpretability and mandatory human-in-the-loop oversight enhances trust and accountability. Nonetheless, real-world deployment requires addressing context-specific challenges of data quality, interoperability, robustness, governance, circular reporting, and equity. If designed with transparency, inclusiveness, and resilience, AI agents have the potential to transform epidemic intelligence into a continuously adaptive and globally connected system.
Unlocking electronic health records: a hybrid graph RAG approach to safe clinical AI for patient QA
IntroductionElectronic health record (EHR) systems present clinicians with vast repositories of clinical information, creating a significant cognitive burden where critical details are easily overlooked. While


