Technology will transform healthcare in Africa say experts

Major forthcoming conference in South Africa will explore how technological innovation is helping the continent to overcome the challenges of under-resourced health systems

INNOVATION: Technology is helping medical professionals in Africa to overcome the challenges of under-resourced health systems

TECHNOLOGICAL INNOVATION is set to play a major role in improving healthcare in Africa experts have predicted ahead a major conference in South Africa later this year.

The role played by sustainable tech-driven innovations and the inclusion of digitisation into health policy agendas are among the key themes to be discussed at this year’s Africa Health Conference to be held in South Africa in October.

Among the other topics to be discussed  at the conference are how Artificial Intelligence (AI) is being used by medical professionals and how African countries are handling  Covid-19 recovery.

Opportunities

Over 8 000 people representing 56 countries are expected to attend the event which will see a range of  healthcare professionals, policymakers and industry leaders discuss the role played by digitisation and technology in creating new opportunities for Africa’s often under-resourced health systems.

Speaking ahead of the event conference producer Cynthia Makarutse, highlighted the fact that technological advancements are having a positive impact on every area of medicine and healthcare in Africa. These include fields such as pharmaceuticals, the manufacturing of medicines and health IT infrastructure.

Increasing numbers of people in Africa are using their smartphones to gain access to medical consultations (Pic: Getty)

She said: “Ever-advancing healthcare tech is presenting new opportunities to deliver the medicine, technology, and human capacity to the people and places where they are needed most.”

Resources

Makarutse added that technology was also “helping industry leaders balance the drive for resilient, inclusive universal healthcare with the reality of constrained human, medical, and technological resources”.

According to a report by the IFC, the private-sector arm of the World Bank, healthcare in the continent is, on average, the worst in the world. It accounts for approximately a quarter of all global disease-related disability and death, while it only has 1 per cent of global health expenditure and 3 per cent of the world’s health employees.

The lack of adequate infrastructure makes it challenging to obtain even the most basic medical care. However advances in technology, such as computer-controlled vending machines, drones, and smartphone apps are helping to remove these obstacles, allowing more people to gain access to life-saving medications.

Smartphones

In recent years Africa has witnessed a huge rise in the number of smartphone users. According to The Global System for Mobile Communications (GSMA) the continent will have over 700 million users by 2025.

Observers have highlighted people are using their smartphones to gain access to medical consultations and diagnoses without having to travel several miles to the nearest medical facility.

For example, in South Africa apps like Hello Doctor have soared in popularity.

It offers users essential healthcare information and a call back from a doctor for the price of 55 rand ($3) per month. In Nigeria  pregnant women and mothers can use an app like Omomi to keep track of their children’s health and have live chats with doctors on a subscription or pay-as-you-go basis.

Evolution

“Entire new sub-fields within the healthcare industry, such as have emerged around these technologies and are already driving the evolution of Africa’s healthcare systems” said Makarutse.

“Beyond simply following the developed world, Africa has the potential to lead in the R&D, production, and manufacture of innovative tech-driven healthcare solutions tailored to our unique healthcare challenges.”

Comments Form

2 Comments

  1. | Chaka Artwell

    Even if all the high-technology of the entire Planet Earth was to be delivered with teachers to the nations of continental Africa.
    Unless the current crop of self-serving venal Elected Government Presidents and Ministers were removed and shunned, Africa’s poverty and backwardness would remain.

    African people live in abject poverty on an African continent that has rich farmland and great mineral wealth, because of the lamentable African leadership from Government Ministers and Presidents.
    Please tell me why the West African Cocoa farmer; who supply seventy percent of the world’s chocolate, cannot afford to sent their children to school?

    The lack of governmental leadership is the main African deficit.
    Even if all the technology of Planet Earth were delivered with teachers to the nations of Africa; without leadership the technology would be of little assistance and desperate poverty would continue to be the norm for the majority of Africa’s poor.

    Reply

    • | Obi C Agor

      Sadly your opinion is not outdated. It remains bewildering that decades of overseas pilgrimages to attain training in prestigious and vital (technological) professions have not made the significant impact on the homeland. Either ambitious entrepreneurs who have ‘brought it home’ have been left unsupported, if not sabotaged or it has indeed remained in the hands of the west, likely due to the debts that need to be settled for such training and the sweet temptations of an ‘organised’ society.

      One wonders how the unpatriotic lackeys in government indeed sleep at night while the people suffer. what is the answer, (nature) science or spirituality or a unique blend of both.. and where is the ‘fork in the road’ where Afrikans abandoned the integrity of their ancestors for the begging bowl

      Reply

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