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TeleDoc - India

Country

India

Region

Global, Africa, South Asia

Programme Summary

TeleDoc provides handheld mobile phone devices to village health workers in India, permitting them to communicate with doctors who use a web application to help diagnose and prescribe for patients. Launched as a pilot project in 15 villages in Haryana in April 2003, TeleDoc is a project of Jiva Institute, an India-based non-profit research and development organisation that aims to foster sustainable development by producing innovations. Jiva hopes that TeleDoc will deliver low-cost diagnostic and prescription services to rural villages currently underserved by existing healthcare systems, thereby improving treatment of diseases in these settings.

Communication Strategies

The process of creating TeleDoc began in 2001, when the India-based Jiva worked closely with community heads of villages in Haryana to identify healthcare priorities and test appropriate health solutions. The result is a system that uses Java-enabled mobile telephones to provide village-based healthcare workers with real-time ability to record and transmit diagnostic information. (Participants log into a customised, password-protected page on the Jiva website). Custom database applications, which synchronise with record-management systems at Jiva's clinic, enable doctors to analyse the data and then prescribe medication and treatment. Medicines are compounded at a regional office, picked up by field workers, and delivered to patients in their homes - a network of pharmacies and delivery people supports this process. The approximate cost of the entire TeleDoc process is 70 rupees (US$1.50) per consultation.

Organisers envision that this low-cost technology might have the following benefits:

  • Families can increase savings and reduce stress with less travel to town-based clinics
  • Village field representatives speak local dialects and know village life. They can supply and encourage the use of hygiene products and promote a wellness-based perspective arising from traditional healthcare practices. They can also provide educational materials on HIV/AIDS, sanitation, and other topics.
  • Women can be treated by women, encouraging discussion about birth control and other women's health issues.
  • Networked health-care recordkeeping and intake mechanisms might improve lifetime care for individuals and facilitate large-scale epidemiological analysis
  • Jobs are created in villages, offering local women and men income opportunities and ensuring that a share of healthcare revenues remains in the localeconomy. (Jiva has designed Teledoc to be a sustainable social enterprise. Teledoc will provide franchisees with licensed medicine compounders who are Jiva employees. This strategy is designed to facilitate effective supply-chain management, billing and revenue sharing, and oversight.)

Development Issues
Health, Technology, Economic Development.

Key Points

According to Jiva, many villagers in India lack access to affordable healthcare. Travel, lost wages, and unmet needs of children and families add to the costs that villagers must pay for treatment. As a result, life expectancy in villages is 8 years less than for city dwellers, morbidity is high, and diseases of poverty such as malaria and tuberculosis often go untreated.

Jiva Health provides treatment and healthcare worldwide using the techniques of Ayurveda, a 5,000-year old system of traditional medical knowledge that based on the idea that health arises from harmony of the body, the senses, the mind, and the spirit. Ayurveda combines medicinal herbs and plants. Since 1993, Jiva Institute has operated an Ayurvedic clinic in the city of Faridabad, Haryana State. Since 1995, Jiva's Ayunique programme has also offered Ayurvedic consultation, diagnosis, and products via the internet. However, this effort to reach rural areas has been impeded by very low literacy levels as well as the huge cost of setting up the infrastructure to support internet services. TeleDoc is a mobile version of Ayunique that draws on the extensive mobile communication spectrum in India.

TeleDoc won the World Summit Award for eHealth, presented December 10 2003 at the World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) in Geneva, Switzerland. Jiva plans to scale Teledoc throughout India (to as many as 5,000 villages), as well as to develop training and awareness components. For example, Jiva plans to include a component dedicated to women's health that will involve training, software, and village-appropriate information resources addressing women's reproductive health. Female field representatives who speak the local language will provide check-ups and consultation throughout pregnancies, and alert patients and town-based physicians to potential complications.

Partners

Funded by the Soros Foundation.

Contact

Jiva Institute
Jiva Ayurvedaz
Jiva Marg
Sector 21B
Faridabad, Haryana
India
Telefax: 91 129 2431198, 2429640
contact@jiva.com
Jiva website

Funded by the Soros Foundation.

Placed on the Communication Initiative site January 23 2004
Last Updated December 03 2007

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