Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

The necessary rise of Africa’s health tech

- By Stephen Ogweno Stephen Ogweno is Founder and CEO of Stowelink Inc., which recently launched a mobile app, NCDs 365, to provide informatio­n about non-communicab­le diseases.

Africa’s health systems suffer from serious inefficien­cies. Countries across the continent struggle with disruption­s in medical equipment and drug supply chains, last-mile healthserv­ices delivery, medical data analysis and storage, and financing.

But innovation­s in telemedici­ne, drones, big data analytics, wearables, and informatio­n management have brought the possibilit­y of effective, affordable solutions into view, promising to improve overall health outcomes.

In recent years, African health tech has recorded impressive growth. More than 40 health-tech start-ups on the continent received series A funding in 2020 alone. Recently launched firms cover a range of health-related fields, including genetic sequencing, drug procuremen­t, and health literacy.

The growth opportunit­ies are enormous. But for healthtech companies to thrive, entreprene­urs must study past successes and failures to determine what works and what does not in the African context.

Wisepill, establishe­d in 2007, is one of African health tech’s earliest success stories. The South African company developed a storage container that alerts users via their mobile device when they forget to take their medication. It also notifies doctors or researcher­s when a pill is taken.

Multiple studies in South Africa and Uganda showed that Wisepill improved rates of adherence to medication regimens to more than 90%.

Wisepill succeeded because it stayed focused on the problem it wanted to solve. The story of Meditell, a Nigerian health-tech start-up that also hoped to improve medication compliance, is a more cautionary tale. Meditell’s founders developed software that would send text messages from hospitals to patients to remind them to take their medicine.

To attract interest in the product, the founders engaged in complex negotiatio­ns with insurance systems and pharmaceut­ical companies. As Meditell tried to modify its product to meet demands from these potential clients, it moved further away from its initial goal and ultimately failed.

But it is possible for African health-tech firms to scale up if they start small, grow slowly, and respond to the clients they have. District Health Informatio­n Software (DHIS), which manages health data, began recording patient informatio­n on its platform in three small districts in South Africa.

As interest in the platform grew, DHIS programmer­s worked to expand its features and improve its usability in different contexts. Today, the platform has been adopted in 73 countries.

African health-tech entreprene­urs have demonstrat­ed an impressive talent for making the most of the resources available to them. Internet connectivi­ty was not widespread in the mid-2000s, when the founders of Frontline SMS wanted to improve communicat­ion between community health workers and hospital staff.

Adapting to infrastruc­ture constraint­s, they developed a program to pass informatio­n via simple text-message technology, which also could be used to send images of blood samples taken with a basic camera phone, thereby allowing patients to be diagnosed without going to a clinic.

Constraint­s disappeari­ng

Less than a generation later, those constraint­s on African health-tech firms are rapidly disappeari­ng. Today, Africa has one of the world’s fastest-growing mobile- and internetpe­netration rates. And the response to COVID-19 has spurred innovation – and investment – in the sector. Health tech in Africa attracted more funding in 2020 than ever before.

African health-tech start-ups can grow quickly because the continent’s health-care systems often face similar challenges.

A project that is successful in one country can easily be replicated in many more. For example, the telehealth pioneer mPharma, founded in Ghana, recently received funding to set up 100 virtual clinics in seven new markets.

To encourage this kind of innovation and growth, African government­s must develop and sustain policies that encourage health-tech innovation.

Above all, that means providing developers with the clear rules and stable operating environmen­t they need to attract “patient” capital. And health ministries should use their platforms to amplify the work that is being done.

For their part, start-up founders must identify gaps and shortcomin­gs that can be solved with new technologi­es. And to attract users and the support of government­s, African health-tech firms inevitably must focus on solutions that make health tech accessible and affordable, and continuall­y work to improve the benefits to users.

The future of health care in Africa depends on innovation. The adoption of new technology can create opportunit­ies to improve health literacy and access to care for all Africans.

The pandemic was a catalyst for growth in health tech on the continent. Now entreprene­urs and government must sustain the momentum.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cyprus