Forum 2009, No. 5: Innovation for Remote Populations/mHealth (#GFHR09)

Posted by | Posted in Access to Health, Conferences, Data, Design, Education, Entrepreneurship & Microfinance Blogs, Franchise, Global Health, Government, HIV/AIDS, Health Systems, Human Resources, ICT, Infectious Diseases, Infrastructure, Innovation, Leadership & Management, Malaria, Mapping, Maternal and Child Health, Mobile Phones, Non Profit, Private Sector, Public Private Partnerships, Research, Social Entrepreneurship, Stats, Supply Chain, Surveillance | Posted on 08-12-2009

The Global Forum for Health Research Forum 2009: Innovating for the Health of All took place in Havana, Cuba from 16-20 November. This is the fifth in a series of posts from the conference. Only one or two more after this one.

My reason for attending Forum 2009 was to participate in a session title “Innovation for Remote Populations”. This post is a about that session. What follows is taken from my recent report to the Global Forum for Health Research – edited only slightly.

Innovation for Remote Populations

Thurs-19-Nov-2009, 14:00-15:45, Global Café, Palacio de Convenciones, La Habana, Cuba

Coordinators/Facilitators:
Patricia Mechael, mHealth and Telemedicine Advisor, Millennium Villages Project, Earth Institute, Columbia University, USA & Egypt (organizer & facilitator)
Tim Hurson, Facilitators Without Borders (facilitator)
Charles Gardner, Global Forum for Health Research (focal point)
Speakers (alphabetical order):
Simon Adebola, NEPAD Council Global Health Commission, Geneva
Najeeb al-Shorbaji, Director, Knowledge Management and Sharing, WHO
Caren Serra Bavaresco, Student, Epidemiology, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil
Karl Brown, Associate Director, Rockefeller Foundation
Arul Chib, Assistant Professor, Wee Kim Wee School of Communication, and Assistant Director, Singapore Internet Research Center, Nanyang Technological University
Dziedzom Komi de Souza, Ph.D. Student and Research Assistant, Parasitology, Noguchi Memorial Institute for Medical Research, Ghana
Bastiaan Hoefman, co-Founder, Text2Change
Bernardita Labarca, Project Coordinator, Zoltner Consulting Group, Chile
Claire O’Neill, Chairperson, Cell-Life-South Africa
Ravi Ram, Head, Monitoring & Evaluation, African Medical Research and Research Foundation (AMREF), Nairobi Kenya
Marco Salmen, OHR-GMCP Initiative for HIV/AIDS, Global Micro-Clinic Project, United States
Jaspal S. Sandhu, Design Researcher, College of Engineering, University of California, Berkeley, USA
Joel Selanikio, co-Founder and Director, Datadyne.org, USA
Garance Upham, General Secretary, Direction, Safe Observer International, France

Coordinators/Facilitators:

  • Patricia Mechael, mHealth and Telemedicine Advisor, Millennium Villages Project, Earth Institute, Columbia University, USA & Egypt (organizer & facilitator)
  • Tim Hurson, Facilitators Without Borders (facilitator)
  • Charles Gardner, Global Forum for Health Research (focal point)

Speakers (alphabetical order):

  • Simon Adebola, NEPAD Council Global Health Commission, Geneva
  • Najeeb al-Shorbaji, Director, Knowledge Management and Sharing, WHO
  • Caren Serra Bavaresco, Student, Epidemiology, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil
  • Karl Brown, Associate Director, Rockefeller Foundation
  • Arul Chib, Assistant Professor, Wee Kim Wee School of Communication, and Assistant Director, Singapore Internet Research Center, Nanyang Technological University
  • Dziedzom Komi de Souza, Ph.D. Student and Research Assistant, Parasitology, Noguchi Memorial Institute for Medical Research, Ghana
  • Bastiaan Hoefman, co-Founder, Text2Change
  • Bernardita Labarca, Project Coordinator, Zoltner Consulting Group, Chile
  • Claire O’Neill, Chairperson, Cell-Life-South Africa
  • Ravi Ram, Head, Monitoring & Evaluation, African Medical Research and Research Foundation (AMREF), Nairobi Kenya
  • Marco Salmen, OHR-GMCP Initiative for HIV/AIDS, Global Micro-Clinic Project, United States
  • Jaspal S. Sandhu, Design Researcher, College of Engineering, University of California, Berkeley, USA
  • Joel Selanikio, co-Founder and Director, Datadyne.org, USA
  • Garance Upham, General Secretary, Direction, Safe Observer International, France

Additional participants – from the audience:

  • Elmer Zelaya – Fundación Chica/Nicaragua
  • Timothy Dye – SUNY Upstate Medical School/USA
  • Jane Kengeya – WHO
  • Oyewale Tomori – Redeemer’s University/Nigeria
  • Lishandu/Zambia (full name/affiliation not available)
  • Vargas/USA (full name/affiliation not available)

Summary:

  1. Diverse users and uses: The speakers presented a variety of mHealth/eHealth applications involving a wide variety of users, including both the health workforce and community members, e.g. educating teenagers about HIV/AIDS in South Africa (O’Neill), Internet access in western Kenya to improve uptake of HIV VCT (Salmen), mobile emergency response systems in Aceh (Chib), electronic IMCI in Tanzania (Brown), text-based health education and health service promotion in Uganda (Hoefman), training for health workers as a downloadable game package for phones in Kenya (Ram), telemedicine to improve the skills of health workers at primary levels in Brazil (Bavaresco), delivery of health information to communities in Chile (Labarca), a general set of tools for mobile data collection being used worldwide (Selanikio), and handheld computers to support rural healthcare delivery in Mongolia (Sandhu).
  2. mHealth/eHealth is about enabling access: A common theme across diverse applications was that information and communication technologies are being used to enable access to health information and services in places where access is difficult because of remoteness and/or cost.
  3. Coordination among the various players: Coordination among donors and projects is necessary to avoid unnecessary duplication of effort and to share what works. This is the role of the mHealth Alliance, supported by Rockefeller Foundation among others (Brown). While there were questions from the program side as to what data donors want (Chib), there was a simultaneous sentiment that donors need “stepwise” guidance (al-Shorbaji).
  4. De-emphasizing technology: The mHealth Alliance has recently been discussing development of an “mHealth Toolkit”, to provide a common technical architecture and platform for those planning to implement mHealth programs (Brown). The existence of free technology platforms – in this case DataDyne’s tool – enables programs to focus on developing health content (Labarca). It is important to have a generalizable tool, as DataDyne has done, that can be used by anyone; if individual governments must approve technology “you’ve lost the battle” (Selanikio). Programs must focus on understanding people and applications more than technology; in response to a question from Dye about the use of ethnography in this field, three examples were given: ethnography of teen chat rooms in South Africa (O’Neill), multi-year ethnographic fieldwork as the basis for the program in western Kenya (Salmen), and design ethnography of the information management practices of rural health workers in Mongolia (Sandhu).
  5. Defining good evaluation: There are challenges to seeing change in population health outcomes (Chib). It is difficult to measure behavior change (Hoefman) and to evaluate systems that provide health content to people (Labarca). Ethnography should be considered more seriously as a complementary evaluation strategy in mHealth (Sandhu). In evaluation, the metrics should match the intervention – mHealth is another intervention; in addition, we want to see the unintended effects of technology (Ram).
  6. New modalities of engaging people: Mobile phones enable fundamentally new ways of engaging with people. As opposed to mass communication that is often used in social marketing, phones allow for interpersonal communication that can be tailored and cost-effective (O’Neill). There are two modalities, moving messages out to people and demand-driven services, where people demand the information that they need (Ram). Salmen lent his support to the importance of demand-driven services and argued that phones will bring more equity. This is all supporting the shift to citizen-centered healthcare (Mechael).
  7. Cautions moving forward: In natural disasters, the cellular network is the first to go (Zelaya). An open question: Who owns the data? (al-Shorbaji). Nobody is thinking about “real sustainability” (Adebola). Reliable phone networks are a challenge (Lishandu). We should be careful that we don’t become too dependent on one tool (al-Shorbaji).
  8. Need to think more creatively: We should be bolder with approaches; if we are, poor countries “could leapfrog” in health and development terms (Upham). Many of the applications discussed focused on SMS and telephony capabilities; we should think about leveraging more advanced capabilities of mobile phones (Kengeya).
  9. Who should design technology? There is an assumption that Africans cannot develop software, but that is not true (Adebola). DataDyne software was already developed by Africans (Selanikio). Africans should develop software, but they shouldn’t redesign what has already been built (Brown).

Conclusions/Recommendations:

  1. There is a need for increased knowledge-sharing about mHealth/eHealth within the global health community. This should definitely include policymakers. As Prof. Tomori elegantly stated, while we are thinking about how to reach remote populations, we should think about “hard-to-reach” African leaders.
  2. While there was discussion of both eHealth and mHealth, the discussion focused primarily on the latter.
  3. There is a need for a continuing dialogue about mHealth. It is unrealistic to expect policy recommendations to come out of this meeting given the state of the field (many open issues) and the limited engagement at the meeting.
  4. Major mHealth topics to be discussed at future meetings: definitions; standards, including how to conduct evaluation; and successes and failures from the field.
  5. The value of the meeting was threefold: (1) it helped extend the network of those working in mHealth; (2) it provided those outside the field with an understanding of the opportunities and challenges of using mobile phones to improve population health; and (3) it placed a much-needed emphasis on prioritizing people and applications over technology.
  6. Mechael suggested reviving the Mobile Metrics and Evaluation Group as a means of maintaining an active mHealth community discussion outside of official meetings.

Other observations:

  1. The fishbowl format was successful in eliciting relevant commentary from a large group of speakers as well as from the audience. Time was an issue, though, as several invited speakers only spoke once and several audience members had comments or questions that they were unable to share.
  2. One key issue that was not explored – as I stated at the end of the session – was the link between social entrepreneurship and mHealth. This is especially relevant to issues of demand, incentivization, and sustainability.
  3. There is a need for an ongoing discussion of these issues at Forum 2010 and beyond – while the conversation will continue in other settings, the Global Forum for Health Research should continue to be involved because of its systems focus, its emphasis on actionable research, and the unique mix of parties (policymakers, donors, implementers) it brings together.
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Accountability, AIDS and Africa – Stop the Stockouts, Financial Oversight (BEMF)

Posted by | Posted in Access to Health, Finance, Food for thought, Global Health, Government, HIV/AIDS, Health Systems, ICT, Infectious Diseases, Innovation, Malaria, Mapping, Mobile Phones, Pharmaceuticals, Research, Supply Chain, TB | Posted on 24-09-2009

In my work in the field, I am no longer surprised to see test stockouts, essential medicines stockouts, supply stockouts, broken or missing diagnostic machines, or patients who are afraid of healthcare workers. It is a complete tragedy, and as I work to help, I think of all the people who are sick or die because of failures of the healthcare system, who cannot tell anyone their stories. For those who do not work in the health system, or haven’t had an experience of health system failure, transparency and data on implementation is practically invisible – so there’s no public awareness of the issues.

So I was thrilled to see recent developments in accountability – the Stop the Stockouts campaign, and the creation of the Budget and Expenditure Monitoring Forum in South Africa.

Power to the People: Stop the Stockouts

Stop the Stock-outs , a multi-country Africa campaign, is using text messages sent by activists and members of the public to expose stock-outs of essential medicines at public health facilities and put pressure on governments to address the issue. It was launched in Kenya, Uganda, Malawi and Zambia by Health Action International (HAI) Africa. During Pill Check week in June, facilities were surveyed, and a map of stockouts was created. The image below incorporates July 2009 data. It was found that many government health facilities were routinely running out of, or just not stocking essential medicines to treat common diseases such as malaria, pneumonia, diarrhoea, HIV and tuberculosis (TB).

“We were finding availability levels in rural, lower-level health facilities of 40 or 50 percent for essential medicines,” said Christa Cepuch, a pharmacist at HAI Africa. Read more from IRIN here

intromap

Show me the Money: HIV Policy AND the Budget and Expenditure Monitoring Forum in South Africa

With a new government in South Africa as of May, there have been some very positive signs. Read the rest of this entry »

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Is YOUR water safe? Toxic Waters – The New York Times Interactive Database of Water Pollution Violations

Posted by | Posted in Conferences, Data, Global Health, Government, Health Systems, ICT, Mapping, Media, Water | Posted on 13-09-2009

In a chilling expose today, Toxic Waters – Clean Water Laws are Neglected, at a Cost to Health, Charles DuHigg of the New York Times covers the impunity of polluters and lax regulation of clean water laws. The NYT then goes a step further – creating transparency through a public database of violations which is ‘more comprehensive than the states or the EPA‘, that you can access to find polluters near you on an interactive map. There is also a nice interactive graphic of the Clean Water Act enforcement record in all 50 states. Deep cuts were made in government funding, and now clearly our Environmental Health Monitoring system needs repair. Democracy needs a strong, free media who reports and then acts. Who knew the NYT would be a key environmental health policy innovator overnight?

Read the rest of this entry »

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No one should die: Ensuring Urban Health Equity

Posted by | Posted in Access to Health, Conferences, Data, Food for thought, HIV/AIDS, ICT, Infectious Diseases, Mapping, Research, Transportation | Posted on 05-09-2009

Beyond the current debate on US health reform, which has us all posting on Facebook “No one should die because they cannot afford health care, and no one should go broke because they get sick “, the fact of the matter is that the accident of your birth largely determines your future health.

And no, it isn’t fair. If you are born in Sierra Leone, 1 out of 6 babies do not survive. In the developed world, 1 out of 10,000 babies die.

The WHO released a landmark report last August on health equity “Closing the gap in a generation”

Social justice is a matter of life and death. It affects the way people live, their consequent chance of illness, and their risk of premature death. We watch in wonder as life expectancy and good health continue to increase in parts of the world and in alarm as they fail to improve in others….Within countries there are dramatic differences in health that are closely linked with degrees of social disadvantage. Differences of this magnitude, within and between countries, simply should never happen.

With a rapidly urbanizing world – projections of 60% of people will live in cities by 2015. Most of these people are escaping rural poverty, and will live in informal settlements in the developing world.

Guidelines must be developed to ensure health equity, but we also need tools to help us plan.

Read the rest of this entry »

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Quick Hits Link Drop

Posted by | Posted in Access to Health, Cause marketing, Design, Finance, Food for thought, Global Health, Innovation, Mapping, Media, Mobile Phones, Population & Reproductive Health | Posted on 08-07-2009

I am bouncing for Beijing this Friday, so I thought it would be a good time to do some desktop clearing. Some good links below:

GIS for a changing health landscape, link
Open Source/Science’s Greatest Need Is … Non-Scientists?, link
Interview with Isaac Holeman of FrontlineSMS:Medic, link
New Female Condom Campaign Set for Uganda, link
Sending out a (Google) SMS in Uganda, link
IDEO Ripple Effect at the Water Summit India, link
Africa Could Feed and Fuel the World, link
Web 2.0 Goes Bollywood-for GOOD, link
Brickmakers and Human Rights in Pakistan, link
Debating Which Aid Works Best is to Miss the Point, link
Who’s in charge of global health spending? link
Poverty tourism is getting a lot of attention lately, link


Bonus: Recycling Solutions
In Mali turning plastic bags into paving stones, link
Global recycling efforts, link
Is paper better than plastic? link
For the do it yourself’ers a plastic laptop bag, link

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