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Health Outcomes: The Role of ICT Applications, Standards, and PracticesMonday 12 Nov 2007Laurent Elder ![]() At the GKP Event on the Future: Third Global Knowledge Conference (GK3), IDRC hosts a panel discussion that includes several of its partners in this area of research. This group will tackle questions such as:
Clearly, understanding local capabilities and needs is crucial to the success of e-health initiatives. Through its large-scale research programmes in Africa, Asia, and Latin America and the Caribbean, IDRC seeks to achieve this understanding. Currently, for example, IDRC supports its partner AfriAfya’s wide-scale survey in Eastern and Southern Africa on the role of ICTs in addressing the health and development challenges of HIV/AIDS. This investigation has found that, while conventional media remain the most widely used channels in obtaining health information, the number of people using mobiles for this purpose has increased in tandem with their general level of access to mobile telephony and the Internet. Illiteracy and “localization issues” are important barriers to the adoption of ICTs, and one of the most effective uses of ICTs in fighting HIV/AIDS is by way of mobile phones and SMS (text messaging). Other studies confirm that the rapid expansion of mobile telephony in Africa has opened new opportunities for using ICTs to deliver health care. Lately we have seen low bandwidth applications — such as demographic surveillance of disease incidence in Uganda — that exploit mobile phones or Personal Digital Assistants (PDAs) to connect via mobile networks. PDAs and smartphones also enjoy the advantages of physical robustness, affordability, and the ability to be recharged by solar power. In Asia, where mobile phones are even more pervasive than in Africa, the potential for health applications is significant. IDRC-supported studies suggest that these devices can make a difference in demographic surveillance and in medical compliance. For example, mobiles make it easier to prevent or control pandemics, such as SARS or avian flu, by capturing data about outbreaks in remote districts and forwarding this information to experts immediately. The fundamental issue that pervades the case histories of failed health ICT projects is a lack of focus on the patient, and this problem must be addressed. By continually verifying clear links between the targeted intervention and the wellbeing of patients, the likelihood of a successful project will be substantially improved. In IDRC’s view, therefore, what is now needed is the development of a rigorous research methodology that is relevant and applicable to the context of developing nations. Such a methodology must be based on an applied modality, where the fundamentals of the work address real and significant issues of human health as they affect the development process. Comments
Posted by: N.O.Natarajan | 02-Apr-10 07:21 AM
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Excellent Topic and areas is very valuable in the latest trend
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