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Phones Deliver Doctor’s Orders in Africa with FrontlineSMSAuthorKim-Mai Cutler
VentureBeat Publication DateSeptember 3, 2009
Summary
This article discusses the development model of FrontlineSMS:Medic, which uses one-to-one and group text messaging to deliver health care in disparate and remote parts of Sub-Saharan Africa. Begun as a mobile health solutions start-up company in the "independent, grassroots, free and open-source tech movement to create change", this company has a pilot programme in Malawi using donated mobile phones, a computer, and a modem. It is attempting to have doctors in central hospitals in Malawi communicate with health workers in remote villages with the cell phones and the short message service (SMS) system. The project trains village health workers to use an open-source SMS platform to keep track of patients. The group is trying to scale up health worker cell phone use in Malawi through a project called HopePhones, where owners donate their old phones. They then take the phones, recycle them through a company called The Wireless Source, and use the proceeds to buy new Nokia phones (which makes it easier to standardise instructions for FrontlineSMS:Medic). Since piloting the programme last year, they’ve gone from training 85 health care workers to 1,000 and are hoping to double that by next year. They are trying to grow the project "Obama campaign-style", meaning that they are relying on bands of college students eager to code the phone software or volunteer in Africa on research grant money. They are trying to train local African university students to manage the programme as well. In addition, as stated here, they are working with other researchers, who are "hacking basic candy bar phones to deliver advanced diagnostic capabilities. A partner, Aydogan Ozcan, an electrical engineering professor at the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA), US, figured out a way to turn a cell phone into a portable blood tester capable of detecting HIV and malaria all with an LED, plastic light filter, and some wires." According to its organisers, the company is still deciding between a for-profit or non-profit model, but wants to keep the technology free and open-source, imaging themselves as a "tech consultancy that’s very transparent and cheap". ContactVentureBeat
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SourcemPulse Newsletter, Vol. 1 Issue 5, on September 30 2009. Placed on the Communication Initiative site October 02 2009 Last Updated October 02 2009 How useful did you find the knowledge and contacts on this page to your work? Post your comments (review comments from others below):COMMENTS POSTED |
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