Title: Telemedicine in Western Africa RAFT
1Telemedicine in Western Africa (RAFT)
- Medical Imaging and Telemedicine (MIT 2005)
Cheikh Oumar Bagayoko, Henning Müller, Antoine
Geissbuhler Medical Informatics Service
2Outline
- Telemedicine
- Goals and challenges
- Technical needs
- Development of the RAFT network
- Results
- Discussion
- Conclusions
3Telemedicine
- Communication and sharing of medical information
and knowledge over distances - Teleconsultations
- Teleteaching
- Knowledge creation
- Online and offline communication
- Most often Teleradiology
- Reduced film cost and transport problems
- Possibility to obtain an expert opinion
- In remote areas, at night,
- Influence strong where experts are rare,
distances large, and infrastructure is limited
4Goals of RAFT
- Develop a South-South network for distance
continuing medical education and
teleconsultations - Between teaching centers and regional hospitals
in French-speaking Africa - Integrate first-line healthcare in the
telemedicine network - Develop capacities for local, high-quality,
medical on-line content - Develop tools for local needs
5Challenges
- Low bandwidth
- Neither telephone lines nor electricity in rural
areas - International bandwidth of RAFT countries is very
limited - End 2004 18 Mbps for the entire country, 1,34
bps/capita (Mali) - Switzerland 2002 66.000 Mbps, 9.040 bps per
capita - Source ITU World Telecommunication Indicators
Database - Satellite transmission can help but is pricey
- Mobile communication is gaining ground
- Unstable electricity supply
- Solar panels
- Batteries (car)
6Rural telemedicine Dimmbal
7(No Transcript)
8Technical needs
- Low requirements for servers and clients to be
able to use old hardware
Requirements client Operating system Windows 95,
98 ,2000, Mac OS, Linux, Solaris, or Irix PC 166
MHz, 64Mb RAM Sound card Screen 1024x768
preferred, 800x600 possible Netscape 4.0 or
Internet Explorer 4.0 or later, Java enabled 28
kbits/s Internet connection (56 kbits/s bandwidth
necessary for video images) Real Player and
Acrobat reader plugins
Requirements server PC 500Mhz, Windows 98, 128 Mb
RAM, sound card Webcam server AXIS 2400
Microphone Document video camera WolfVision or
equivalent Ethernet hub or switch, 10 or 100
Mbits/s.
9Development
- 2001 Mali 4 sites in Bamako, 3 regional
hospitals, 1 rural hospital - 2002 Mauritania 7 sites in Nouakchott, 8
regional hospitals, 1 rural telecentre - 2003 Morocco (Marrakech)
- 2004 Burkina-Faso, Senegal, Tunisia
- 2005 Cameroon, Ivory Coast, Madagascar,
Djibouti, Niger
10Results Teleteaching
- 50 teachings from Geneva hospitals to Raft
countries with important subjects e.g HIV ,
obstetrical surgery, fistulas in urology - 48 from Bamako to Geneva physicians and medical
students and others RAFT counties on e.g
malaria , leprosy , dermatology - In October 2005, every RAFT country will have a
system for teleteaching diffusion - Thanks to this system an MD agreed to go 875 km
from Bamako because otherwise he saw himself cut
from the rest of the world
11Teleteaching from Bamako
12South - North Collaboration
13Results Teleconsultations
- 10 teleconsultations to Geneva in neurosurgery
for 15 children in Mali - 2 teleconsultations to Bamako in leprosy and
dermatology for Geneva University hospitals and
another clinic in Geneva (de la Tour) - 4 teleconsultations in radiology to Marseilles
for Bamako University hospital
14Teleconsultation neurosurgery
15Results Collaborative knowledge creation
- National web portals
- e.g. Mali, Mauritania
- Disease-specific content
- e.g., rheumatic heart disease in Morocco
- Multi-site web-casting
- Combining web-casting with phone conference
- South-North teaching
- e.g., Leprosy, Malaria courses for Geneva
tropical medicine courses - Dynamic web sites
- Diagnostic and therapeutic approaches including
traditional practices - e.g., Pluriderm for skin diseases
16A library of created courses
- Can be replayed, information can be added
17Discussion
- Looking at these results should one not conclude
that the application of telemedicine seems more
than justified in poor countries even if means of
communication remain little developed? - However, the problem remains the weak band-width
and the energy sources, which are not impossible
to circumvent - Pragmatism and the realism with tools adapted to
the context must remain the rule
18Conclusions
- Developing countries have different requirements
than industrialized nations - Telemedicine can have a strong impact in these
countries - Creating local knowledge
- Allowing remote parts to get access to medical
care - Local teleteaching (south-south) is often more
effective than north-south networks - Better adapted to local requirements and customs
19Is IT a priority?