Title: PowerPointPrsentation
1eHEALTH NETWORK FOR AFRICA NEED FOR LOW-COST
MOBILE/WIRELESS INFRASTRUCTURES
RESEARCH DEVELOPMENT PROPOSAL
Adesina Iluyemi PhD Candidate CHMI, Univ of
Portsmouth, UK Member, eMobility
ETP Adesina.iluyemi_at_port.ac.uk 22.04.2008 WWRF 20
2Content
- Health Problems in Africa
- Definition and Policy drivers for eHealth in
Africa through wireless technologies - Introducing the concept of wireless i-DeHI in
Africa - Barriers to wireless i-DeHI in AfricA
- Opportunities for WWRF
- Research and Development proposal
3Health Problems in Africa
- Africa has a population of about ONE billion
people - Up to 70 lives in isolated rural areas
- Half lives on half a dollar per day
- Poor telecom transportation infrastructure
- Lack of Infrastructure and Capacity Healthcare
delivery - Brain Drain International and Local (Rural vs.
Urban) - Africa has 10 of world population with 25 of
global health burden but with only 3 of global
health workforce - Poverty Financial constraints
- HIV/AIDS accounted for 2.4 million deaths alone
in 2002 - 40 survive on less than 1 per day
- Malaria related mortality is at 1 million deaths
(mostly children) yearly - Enormous economic cost on health systems
- 10 of individual income
- 50 of Africas population pays out of pocket
- Human resources impact
4eHealth as a developmental tool
- eHealth is the use of information (data) and
communication technologies for health processes
(Health System) either locally and at a distance
(WHO 2005). - eHealth involves telemedicine, telehealth,
telecare, health management information systems,
health knowledge systems etc. - Health System is information, data and
communication intensive and requires more than
SMS - Health Workers as Knowledge Workers
- Patients as citizens (Citizen-centric eHealth)
- Health System as Data processing organization
- Wireless technologies plus eHealth mHealth
5Policy for eHealth in Africa
- Africa Union/ New Partnership for Africas
Development (NEPAD) - NEPADs Action Plan Strategy on sector
development - Alignment between telecom and health sectors
- Calls for a continental-wide eHealth
infrastructure based on wireless telecom
infrastructure - NEPADs eHealth for
- Communication system
- Integration of access to vertical HISs
- Extending healthcare to isolated and rural
communities and populations
6Global Policy for eHealth
- Global initiatives in favour of eHealth is being
championed by The World Health Organisation (WHO)
under the Global Observatory for eHealth (GOe)
(WHA 58.18) - The European Union has plans for eHealth in
Africa - Using wireless/mobile technologies
- International Telecommunication Union (ITU) since
1998 has commissioned eHealth projects in
developing countries using mostly wireless
technologies - The ITU-D Q14 Working Group is focussed on
eHealth strategy and policy development with
interest in mobile/wireless technologies
especially in developing countries - All support Public-Private Partnerships (PPPs)
for eHealth
7Why eHealth for Africa
- To provide access to distributed health knowledge
and information to mostly rural health workers. - Urgency is required to meet the MDGs targets and
to reverse the poor health and developmental
ratings - Geographical barriers to access health service
provision especially in Africa (rural areas). - Connectivity ( wireless telecommunications) is
becoming widely accessible and available even in
rural communities - But there are issues Cost, telecom
infrastructure, existing health problems etc
8Rationale for Wireless eHealth in Africa
- Mobile devices are relatively cheaper that Fixed
computers - Consumes less power (Lack of electricity)
- They are portable, hence more secured?
- Wireless networks are relatively cheaper and
faster to build relative to build than fixed
networks. For example , the Nigerian case - Mobile/ Wireless technologies provide the best
opportunity for Africa to achieve the Africa
interconnectivity objective and for building
eHealth Infrastructure
9Wireless tools use for eHealth in Africa
- Wireless technologies use GSM/GPRS/3G, WiFi,
WiMAX, WLL (Fixed or Mobile CDMA), Broadband
wireless, Satellite, VSAT (Mobility vs Universal
Access) - Mobile devices PDAs, Smartphone, Cellular
phones, Tablet PCs, Laptops, smart cards, memory
sticks, USB keys, sensors.
FMFI 2007
10Health Workers using mobile devices
11A Innovative Concept Proposal
- Health Systems in Africa are operated through a
District Health System (DHS) - Hierarchical and pyramidal territorial
enterprise - A distributed and geographically dispersed
Enterprise - An information and process intensive Enterprise
- A central urban hospital linked to peripheral
semi-urban/rural health centres - Has different cadres of Health (Knowledge)
Workers with information needs for patient care
enterprise management - Integrated District eHealth Infrastructure
(i-DeHI) - Built on Wireless Infrastructure
- Including mobile/portable hardware, software
wireless networks
12i-DeHI Innovation
i-DeHI
- i-DeHI as the basic unit for an Africa-wide
eHealth Infrastructure
13A District eHealth Network
- Basic architecture for health care delivery in
Africa
14A Cluster of District Wireless eHealth Network
Regional eHealth Network
- Regional or National eHealth Infrastructure will
require use of different devices and wireless
networks with implications for interoperability
and integration
15Lessons from African Cases
- UHIN-GPRS- still limited in bandwidth
- Early generation PDAs-Planning for Smartphones
- Solar Energy
- Cell-Life- GPRS/3G- Business model
- PDAs/Smartphones
- FMFI/MUTI Telehealth- Long distance WiFi-
WANLAN, VSAT- expensive, policy barriers - Considering 3G
- Desktop Laptops
WiFi -CellPhones - Solar Energy
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17A District eHealth Network
FMFI 2007
- A rural eHealth project in rural South Africa
using low-cost Mesh Wi-Fi networks
18Barriers to Wireless eHealth in Africa
- Technological
- Telecommunication Infrastructure ( policy, high
investment costs , availability) - Power /Electrical Infrastructure
- Economic/Financial Infrastructure - Low-income
- Organizational/Management issues
19Barrier 1 Telecom/Technological Infrastructures
- Lessons from an Africa-wide eHealth Network
- Multilateral Initiative on Malaria Communication
Network (MiMCom) - A continental-wide eHealth Infrastructure with 12
National nodes - Inter-national nodes mostly with VSATs
- VSATs chosen over fibre-optics at inception
- Intra-national communication with terrestrial
wireless-WiFi, microwave link - Devices-Laptops, PDAs, PCs
- Reveals different solutions for national nodes-
depends on availability and costs of bandwidths
20MiMCom continent-wide eHealth Network in Africa
- This depicts national nodes with different
networks
21Lessons from African Cases
- Melanges of devices and networks Need for
Ambient Network
FMFI 2007
22Barrier 2 Financial Infrastructure
- Issues
- Non-availability of Low-cost Broadband Access
- High costs of broadband access especially of
satellite connectivity access - Possible solution ?
- Low-cost Broadband Wireless Infrastructure
- Introducing EU funded Digital World Foundation
project on Low-cost Technology initiative - Bring this issue into global business and
developmental agendas
23Introducing DigitalWorld EU Project
- European Research Framework
- Framework Programme 7 (2007-2013) just started
- DigitalWorld FP7-216513 is an 18 month research
project - ICT-1-9.1 - International Cooperation (Africa and
Latin America) - Coordination and Support Action
- Started January 1, 2008
- Duration 18 Months
24User-centric mHealth conceptual model
25mHealth Users Context
26Users issues 1
- Technical
- Human Computer Interface (HCI)
- Open Source (Hardware Software)
- Social
- Adoption issues (Development Implementation)
- Culture
- Local Knowledge
- Language
27Users issues software interface design
- HCI
- Screen size and design (Adaptive)
- Network Configuration-Thin Thick clients,
remote located synchronisation - Software
- Palm OS
- Symbian
- Windows Mobile
- Google Android
28Users issues Hardware 1
- Open Source design?
- Multi-wireless connectivity
- Power- Solar? (Global Green Movement)
- Memory (Stable and Labile)
- Security
- Structure- (Ruggedized)
- Low-cost devices-
- Simputer
- OLPC
- Classmate,
- EeePC
29Users issues Hardware 2
- Device Morphology/Transition
- mobile portable nomadic
- Ultra mobile portable devices (UMPCs)?
- Isomerism?
- Users opinion from Africa
- Desktop Laptops
WiFi -CellPhones
- Device Morphology/Transition
- mobile portable nomadic
- Ultra mobile portable devices (UMPCs)?
- Isomerism?
- Users opinion from Africa
- Desktop Laptops
WiFi -CellPhones
- Device Morphology/Transition
- mobile portable nomadic
- Ultra mobile portable devices (UMPCs)?
- Isomerism?
- Users opinion from Africa
- Desktop Laptops
WiFi -CellPhones
- Device Morphology/Transition
- mobile portable nomadic
- Ultra mobile portable devices (UMPCs)?
- Isomerism?
- Users opinion from Africa
- Desktop Laptops
WiFi -CellPhones
- Device Morphology/Transition
- mobile portable nomadic
- Ultra mobile portable devices (UMPCs)?
- Isomerism?
- Users opinion from Africa
- Desktop Laptops
WiFi -CellPhones
- Device Morphology/Transition
- mobile portable nomadic
- Ultra mobile portable devices (UMPCs)?
- Isomerism?
- Users opinion from Africa
- Desktop Laptops
WiFi -CellPhones
UMPCs
UMPCs
UMPCs
UMPCs
- Low-cost UMPCs for Health
- OLPC case
- Low-cost UMPCs for Health
- OLPC case
- Low-cost UMPCs for Health
- OLPC case
- Low-cost UMPCs for Health
- OLPC case
- Low-cost UMPCs for Health
- OLPC case
- Low-cost UMPCs for Health
- OLPC case
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32Users Social issues
- Doctors in South Africa (Banderker et al 2005)
- Job relevance
- Usefulness
- Perceived User resources
- Device Characteristics
- Supports from Public National government
hospital administrators - Patient influence
- Legal issues (Decision Support Systems, Drug
directories)
33Organizational issues 1
- Technology
- Technology is not enough!
- Positive economic benefits
- Users led and focus
- Social and ethical issues
- Health workers responsibility
- Device and applications development and
regulation. - (HealthService 24- 2006)
34Organizational issues 2
- Environment
- Health Policies, regulation, structure and
financing - Evaluation in real-life contexts
- Multiple actors and structures
- Health IT infrastructure (organisation).
- Users Trust
- Users led model
- (MOSAIC -2005)
35Sustaining eHealth projects in Africa
- 70 of IT investments globally are failures Note
failure here is multifaceted - Africa is not faring better either
- Same problem with eHealth projects especially in
Africa - Hence, problem is sustainability which can be
- Organisational /Environmental
- Social/cultural
- Human (Health Workers)
- Technological
80 cause of IT Failure
Page 35
WWRF20 Adesina Iluyemi adesina.iluyemi_at_port
.ac.uk 22.04.2008 Wireless eHealth for Africa
36Sustainability issues
- Building a sustainable Business Model for
Win-Win Situation - Understanding and Meeting Multiple Stakeholders
- End-users needs for design Pro Poor vs. Niche
markets - Understanding Organizational Process for
innovation diffusion - Understanding Environmental Constraints and
Enablers Policies/Regulation, Electricity
(Renewable Energy), Financial/Economic/Funding - Instituting sustainable Global Local
Public-Private Partnerships (PPPs) - Supporting Local Small Medium Enterprise (SMEs)
- Supporting Low Access/Entry costs models
- Technological- Low cost Broadband Infrastructure
- Wireless Telecom such as WiMax, WiFi, Broadband
Satellite - Low cost mobiles devices and Laptops (OLPC, Intel
Classmate etc - Open Source vs. Proprietary Software Hardware?
37Sustainable Solutions
- High investment, implementation and purchasing
costs of wireless telecom infrastructures as
barriers (Gilhooly 2005, World Bank 2008) - Policy needed to stimulate
- Public service innovation/re-engineering
(eHealth) - Mass and low-cost production of components
- Appropriate Business models- Bottom of the
Pyramid (BOP) model - Local and Global Public-Private Partnerships
(PPPs) (NEPAD e-Schools project) - Social and developmental inputs in Telecom
regulation business
38Opportunities for WWRF-WG 1
- User-centric wireless products services in
developing countries - Case studies demonstrate the feasibility of
mHealth in Africa Health System - Low-cost portable and mobile devices like the
OLPC are needed - Low-cost broadband wireless infrastructure are
also required - Research to influence future design and
development - To support wireless eHealth business model in
developing countries - Being developed with Rural Living Labs Europe
- To be instituted in four regions of Africa
- To develop a sustainable wireless eHealth model
39Opportunities for WWRF-WG 2
- Transmission
- Wireless Broadband for eHealth web services and
applications - Development of optimal/low-cost
mobile/portable/nomadic devices, infrastructures
and software - Ambient Wireless Networks
- Melanges of wireless networks
- Need to explore interoperability for facility,
community, district, provincial, national
regional and continental access and connectivity
40Ongoing Research Work _at_ CHMI
- Reviewing all eHealth projects in developing
countries especially on mHealth - Focus is specifically on the factors affecting
eHealth sustainability or success in Africa - Operational strategic management of eHealth
implementation use in Africa - Developing a holistic framework to evaluate
existing eHealth systems in Africa i.e. linking
operational with strategic (policy) level - Framework will capture process and outcome
impacts from design to implementation and use - Funding required for field trips to Africa
41Conclusion
- A call to WWRF to support research into
- Low-cost mobile/wireless technologies for
Development in Africa - eHealth
- e-Education
- e-Agriculture
- e-Business, e-Commerce, e-Banking
- Scoping change management issues in using
mobile/wireless technologies for eHealth in
Africa / Developing countries - THANK YOU FOR LISTENING!
42eHEALTH NETWORK FOR AFRICA NEED FOR LOW-COST
MOBILE/WIRELESS INFRASTRUCTURES
RESEARCH DEVELOPMENT PROPOSAL
Dr Adesina Iluyemi PhD Candidate CHMI, Univ of
Portsmouth, UK Member, eMobility
ETP Adesina.iluyemi_at_port.ac.uk 22.04.2008 WWRF 20