The Mercury

Drones to data: Africa turns to healthtech

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STANLEY Ngwira was used to seeing mosquitoes throng the sky over his village in Malawi, but a drone hovering above the swarms was a new sight altogether for the retired teacher.

The drones had been programmed to monitor mosquito breeding grounds in the central district of Kasungu – one of a slew of innovation­s under way in Africa to harness technology for health.

Cheap to buy and easy to use, the drones were set to work last year to help scientists map which bodies of water were infested with mosquitoes, carrying malaria in a continent laden with some of the worst health-care outcomes in the world.

“We were very impressed when we saw the researcher­s flying their objects which they said will help in fighting this disease,” 87-year old Ngwira said.

“I usually get malaria twice or thrice per year, especially during the rainy season,” he said, hoping that surveillan­ce in the sky might do away with long treks on foot to his nearest hospital.

From tackling malaria in Malawi to boosting maternal health in Uganda, local innovators are turning to health tech – the intersecti­on of health care and technology – to fill the gaps in often overburden­ed and underresou­rced health-care systems.

In Kasungu, drone footage and GPS co-ordinates of water bodies rich in mosquito larvae allow researcher­s to pinpoint malaria hot spots, sample the water, then suggest ways to control malaria’s spread, be it with drainage or chemicals. Such innovation­s can shorten the long lines of patients at overstretc­hed clinics and hospitals, said researcher­s at the Malawi Liverpool Wellcome Trust who ran the project.

Funding for health tech in Africa has risen in recent years,with the sector expected to be worth more than $100 billion (about R1.6 trillion) by 2030, according to a Google and Internatio­nal Finance Corporatio­n report.

Although still budding, investment is already reaping results in rural outposts and the most deprived communitie­s, the study found.

“We are not saying that these innovation­s must replace medical experts,” said Olawande Daramola, a professor of informatio­n technology at the Cape Peninsula University of Technology.

“They are a form of support to increase productivi­ty of medical experts, and also help improve medical treatments and health-care services where needed,” he said.

In sub-Saharan Africa, one doctor exists for every 50 000 patients – more than 80 times the ratio of 1:600 the World Health Organizati­on recommends that medics can handle.

Nor is it just the medics who are missing.

Many African countries lack basic infrastruc­ture such as hospitals, electricit­y, roads or equipment, the Internatio­nal Journal of Healthcare Informatio­n Systems and Informatic­s found.

“In this context, there is an opportunit­y for tech to play a role in adding significan­t value to the health-care sector in Africa,” said Daramola.

In Uganda, the Wekebere lightweigh­t

belt – developed by a local company – can be wrapped round any pregnant belly in seconds to pick up vital readings from both mother and baby.

So far, 15 000 mothers have used the Wekebere app to monitor their baby’s progress and get personalis­ed health tips.

Sent remotely, the tips fit well in a new wave of arms-length health care that became standard practice in the pandemic.

Be it video chat or short texts linking patients to doctors, telemedici­ne surged in Covid-19 with everyone confined to home.

But innovation­s in telemedici­ne had already been growing pre-Covid for their potential to offer affordable care to far-flung communitie­s who are short of local services or know-how.

In South Africa, the Department of Health’s MomConnect platform has reached over 2 million women, with over 500 000 messages since 2014, providing essential informatio­n to

expectant mothers through a digital helpdesk.

SASAdoctor in Kenya, operating since 2019, is a 24-hour medical app and in-person service that has 127 000 registered patients, according to the company’s director, Francis Osiemo.

With HIV so widespread in South Africa, social enterprise BroadReach Healthcare uses artificial intelligen­ce (AI) to assess the nation’s clinics and suggest ways they can speed up the roll-out of life-saving, antiretrov­iral drugs.

In KwaZulu-Natal, the number of virally suppressed people rose from 42% to 92% thanks to the insights that AI delivered in over 18 months, BroadReach said.

Innovators have also used tech to cut costs for patients.

Founded in Ghana in 2014, mPharma negotiates bulk prices and re-distribute­s medicines as needed to pharmacies and patients.

It has expanded to Nigeria, Zambia, Zimbabwe and Kenya, and also offers micro-payment options for some highend drugs.

“These innovation­s can make health care proactive instead of reactive,” said Bruno Ssekiwere, founder of Deep Learning IndabaX Uganda, an AI non-profit.

But just as the Malawi drones struggle to fly in heavy wind, rain or heat, researcher­s say tech is no silver bullet for a continent struggling to keep pace with a heavy health burden.

“Data is a major issue, it is a bedrock of artificial intelligen­ce,” said Daramola, explaining how health records in Africa are rarely digitised or easily accessible.

Other challenges include poor access to electricit­y and the internet, said Ssekiwere, while legal and ethical frameworks to guide the use of new tech is also nascent.

“Who takes the credit or the blame for health tech decisions? The doctor? Or the system?” asked Daramola.

“The answers are not yet clear,” he said.

Many tech innovators also grapple with these questions and use online community Sisonke Biotik to thrash out hot topics.

The group of some 180 global members is co-authoring a research report on machine learning and health care in Africa.

“Talent is uniformly distribute­d across the planet, but opportunit­y isn’t,” said Chris Fourie, one of Sisonke Biotik’s founders.

Sisonke Biotik says its value stems from the site being community-led and African-centric, with a focus on collaborat­ion and data sovereignt­y.

Laws governing data sovereignt­y – the regulation of data by the country in which the data originates – are non-existent or precarious in many African countries, according to a Deloitte report, leaving people open to data theft or tracking.

“The health-care space is a lot more protective over their research compared to the computer science space ... so we are going to try our best to bring (collaborat­ion) into the healthcare space wherever we can,” said Fourie.

 ?? | Reuters ?? A YOUNG girl with malaria rests in the inpatient ward of a health centre in South Sudan. Many African countries lack basic infrastruc­ture, such as hospitals, electricit­y, roads or equipment, but inexpensiv­e modern technology, such as drones, could prove to be the answer in tackling diseases like malaria.
| Reuters A YOUNG girl with malaria rests in the inpatient ward of a health centre in South Sudan. Many African countries lack basic infrastruc­ture, such as hospitals, electricit­y, roads or equipment, but inexpensiv­e modern technology, such as drones, could prove to be the answer in tackling diseases like malaria.

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