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‘The medical advice that we provide has to be correct. It’s not like delivering food’

▶ Telehealth company Altibbi puts quality first as it aims for a $1bn IPO,

- writes Aarti Nagraj

More than a decade ago, most people visited doctors in person when they were unwell. Telehealth was not a buzzword and was not part of Jordanian entreprene­ur Jalil Allabadi’s plan when he set up Altibbi in 2011.

But the UAE-based start-up, which now claims to be the largest artificial intelligen­ce digital health platform in the Middle East, has changed and expanded significan­tly since it was created as an online Arabic medical dictionary.

“Our story is different from the normal tech start-ups you see in this region,” says Mr Allabadi, founder and chief executive of Altibbi.

“The original idea actually came from my father, who is a doctor [trained in Germany].

“He came back to work in refugee camps and realised there was a big gap in communicat­ion between the patient and doctor because medicine in the Arab world is taught in English or French.”

To meet that gap and educate patients, his father started writing an Arabic-language medical dictionary. It made its way into universiti­es and clinics, but did not “achieve what he wanted”.

Mr Allabadi, who at the time was pursuing his MBA abroad, began a project to promote the dictionary and widen its reach by putting it online, similar to an Arabic version of US-based health publisher WebMD.

The MBA project sparked the idea for a full-fledged business, and Mr Allabadi returned to Jordan and put together a plan.

His first hirings were a pharmacist and a tech expert, both of whom were family friends. Two years after the project, Altibbi was launched and very soon traffic began to build.

Having bootstrapp­ed to launch the start-up, the team invested heavily in its content and began monetising the platform through advertisin­g.

“The vision was to create a WebMD of the Arab world and we did that,” Mr Allabadi says.

“It was 15,000 pages that we put online at first, which was fantastic. We started getting thousands of visitors to the website every day.”

The plan went well and covered costs, but it was “not growing wildly, because we came to the realisatio­n that advertisin­g in this part of the world ... back then was extremely low and digital [advertisin­g] in health was a small fraction of the whole pie”.

“So we had to switch [the plan] and that was one of the first painful decisions that we had to make.”

One of the biggest traffic generators on the site was launched in mid-2013 – a free question and answer feature in which patients could interact with doctors.

The Altibbi team pitched to investors that they would focus on building this model and shut down advertisin­g.

By 2016-2017, the start-up had launched a primary care general practition­er telehealth product, which remains its main product today.

Demand for digital health care has grown in recent years, with the coronaviru­s pandemic providing a significan­t boost as lockdowns forced people to depend on remote medical services.

The remote healthcare market in the Middle East and North Africa is projected to reach $1.8 billion in 2024, growing at a compound annual rate of 12.8 per cent from $989 million in 2019, according to the 2020 Global Ventures Digital Health report.

The healthcare technology start-up ecosystem in the Mena region is also booming and attracted investment­s of more than $80m in 2021, marking an annual increase of 29 per cent in funding, according to data platform Magnitt. The market is worth more than $1.5bn. That is 22 times what it was in 2016.

Altibbi raised $500,000 from investors in 2014 and another $500,000 in 2015.

In 2017, it raised $6.5m in a Series B funding led by Middle East Venture Partners and Dash Ventures, both investors in the seed round of the company.

When Mr Allabadi made his pitch to investors in 2017, Altibbi was receiving 200,000 unique visitors each day and conducting 100 daily consultati­ons. Today, the site gets a million visitors a day and conducts 5,000 to 6,000 consultati­ons.

It has conducted more than 4.5 million consultati­ons to date, has more than 1,500 certified doctors on the platform and offers 24-7 telehealth in seven countries in the Mena region. It also hosts more than two million pages of content.

In March, the start-up raised a further $44m in a Series B funding round led by Foundation Holdings, Hikma Ventures and existing investors Global Ventures and Dash Ventures.

The new funds will be used to expand into an online pharmacy and diagnostic­s collection.

The company also aims to increase its investment­s in machine learning to help doctors provide precise diagnoses, referrals and prescripti­ons.

The amount raised accounted for 50 per cent of last year’s capital investment in the sector across Mena, and supported health technology to emerge as the fourth-most funded industry in the region during the first quarter, said Magnitt’s Mena Q1 2022 Venture Investment Report.

The HealthTech sector has attracted both limited funding and a smaller number of start-ups, because it is a “very difficult” industry with “huge” liabilitie­s, says Mr Allabadi.

The company operates on a direct business to consumer model, with most patients paying for the telehealth services.

“It varies between countries but on average, it’s about

$5 a month to get unlimited telehealth consultati­ons. It’s primary care telehealth, we’re not talking about specialist­s,” he says.

“And we are working a lot now with insurance companies and with government­s as well. This is a new thing, especially after Covid-19, since government­s became more interested.

“We have started working with the government in Jordan, the government in Egypt and now we are having some conversati­ons in Saudi Arabia.”

Altibbi maintains a stringent quality-control process when bringing in doctors, with constant monitoring to ensure the quality of care is not compromise­d, Mr Allabadi says.

It streamline­s costs by using technology to ensure “quality of operations, efficiency and scale”.

“This is where a lot of machine learning and AI data science [comes in],” says Mr Allabadi. “It’s happening in the back end to make sure that we’re [ensuring quality] ... since there is a lot of liability.

“The medical advice has to be correct. It’s not like delivering food. If you give the wrong advice, the patient will face other complicati­ons.”

Using technologi­cal solutions also supports the platform to start predicting patterns and improving the quality of care. Mr Allabadi stresses that data for research remains anonymous, with privacy protected.

Looking ahead, the start-up is focusing on Saudi Arabia and Egypt and on growing vertically in those regions.

It is also considerin­g a possible initial public offering in the next two or three years, with one of its investors at the recent fund-raising stating that Altibbi aims to be “the first publicly listed digital health unicorn [valued at more than $1 billion] IPO in the GCC”.

“We don’t have any plans for [a listing] right now,” Mr Allabadi says. “But it is on our plate for the next two to three years to become a unicorn ... [and] then going for an IPO would be an option.”

 ?? Altibbi ?? Altibbi founder and chief executive Jalil Allabadi, left, whose idea for the company stemmed from a university project, with Ayman Sharaiha, co-founder and chief operating officer
Altibbi Altibbi founder and chief executive Jalil Allabadi, left, whose idea for the company stemmed from a university project, with Ayman Sharaiha, co-founder and chief operating officer

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