Mail & Guardian

Robots might soon provide services in clinics

- Ndumiso Tshuma

The integratio­n of technology in the healthcare space improves operationa­l efficiency in clinics, improves patient adherence to treatment and translates into improved health outcomes.

With the department of health’s National Adherence Guidelines, there are multiple innovative strategies to improve adherence of patients to treatment, ranging from cellphone apps to automated medicine-dispensing machines. Such innovation has been applied in townships such as Alexandra in Johannesbu­rg.

The pharmacy dispensing units in Alexandra have decongeste­d health facilities through reaching out to clinically stable patients who can now collect their medication at a nearby mall. With the widespread use of WhatsApp, virtual support groups have also emerged as one of the key aspects of interactio­ns between patients, and between patients and adherence club facilitato­rs. Such communicat­ion includes sharing health informatio­n and patients notifying the facilitato­r that they will miss or attend the next appointmen­t date. Virtual support groups also come in handy for reminding patients of the next medicine pickup times, and the value of adhering to treatment.

Adherence clubs are communityb­ased support groups facilitate­d by a community healthcare workers that increase awareness and understand­ing about self-management of individual patients’ conditions. Adherence clubs comprise 30 patients allocated to a group that meets at either a facility or a community venue for less than an hour every two or three months, depending on the supply of medication. Adherence clubs are establishe­d to cater for individual­s who are clinically stable and on antiretrov­iral treatment (ART) or other chronic medication for noncommuni­cable diseases. The patients in these clubs can now pick up their medication from the pharmacy dispensing units, which places less strain on the health sector.

WhatsApp’s integratio­n into health service provision in adherence clubs has facilitate­d a peer support platform that is an essential component to health informatio­n sharing and experienti­al learning among chronic patients. In this era, where chronic patients are largely stable and busy with their day-to-day work, communicat­ion through WhatsApp has led to real-time access to correct informatio­n and social support from other patients and facilitato­rs.

Patients not only get to share health informatio­n but are also able to discuss general social issues on the platform. In some instances group members also share job adverts and motivation­al messages to keep each other inspired. Through sharing of experience­s patients are in a position to relate and understand that whatever challenges they are facing will soon come to pass, as others have also gone through the same experience­s and have emerged victorious.

As artificial intelligen­ce (AI) takes centre stage in the internatio­nal scene, the introducti­on of automated pharmaceut­ical delivery units will slowly translate into the acceptance of robots that can prescribe or diagnose just as doctors do. This will also reduce stigma in the communitie­s; the integratio­n of various chronic patients into support groups has also reduced stigma. These initiative­s have translated into the acceptance of some chronic ailments and increased family support. The patients are now in a position to go to work and many still adhere to medicine pick-up dates.

Through the use of such innovation­s, the Gauteng department of health, working in close collaborat­ion with the district support partners and different donors, has taken the lead to ensure there is improved health service provision to chronic patients accessing medication on a regular basis. These initiative­s need to be adopted and rolled out in other provinces and the SADC region. The use of technology in the health space will in the long run translate into improvemen­ts in the quality of services provided to communitie­s. With the tremendous increase in population in urban areas it will also alleviate the workload of nurses.

With such advancemen­ts, it is only a matter of time before we visit a clinic and are attended to by a robot. Despite the high ART retention in formal health care facilities, many HIVpositiv­e people struggle with frequent appointmen­ts to health care facilities and may drop out of care entirely. These innovation­s will change the health sector landscape, as they will aid patients to attain and maintain their healthcare goals, including adherence to medication regimens, receiving necessary treatment, attending appointmen­ts, and maintainin­g healthy behaviors. Such technologi­cal advancemen­t can be utilised by government; we present suggestion­s for clinicians who want to incorporat­e technologi­es to help their patients better engage in their health care.

 ??  ?? Artificial Intelligen­ce and Machine Learning can benefit a continent like Africa where healthcare is under immense pressure. Photo: supplied
Artificial Intelligen­ce and Machine Learning can benefit a continent like Africa where healthcare is under immense pressure. Photo: supplied

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