Weaving eHealth Into the Fabric of the African Health System
The 4th Afrihealth Conference, held in Nairobi, Kenya on Nov. 30 and Dec. 1, broadened the debate on the adoption of Telemedicine, mHealth and eHealth in Africa, and brought attention to the need to integrate and mainstream eHealth into the continent’s health system.
The theme of the conference was “consolidating the gains of technological innovation in healthcare through effective management,” and some debate sparked on what direction to take eHealth in Africa.
According to Science and Development Network reporter Maina Waruru, experts attending the conference argued that “a focus on high-tech healthcare solutions could come at the expense of basic prevention such as access to clean water and sanitation, good nutrition and hygiene, and health education.” Since 80 percent of illnesses in Africa stem from preventable infectious diseases, this focus on high-tech is a move in the “wrong direction.”
But the potential for using ICTs to continue to improve basic healthcare in Africa is great, and a focus should be on ensuring that appropriate technology is utilized and effectively delivered.
One concern attendees brought up was the lack of a legal framework to determine what qualifies a person to work as an “e-health” professional. E-health is often practiced by non-professionals such as ICT technicians and nurses, and many countries have not established what qualifications are needed to be certified as a professional.
In addition, physicians in many countries are of an older generation and received their degrees before the ICT explosion. Many are not comfortable with situations where they consult with patients remotely, without actually being in the room with them.
To address some of these issues, Shariq Khoja, the coordinator of the e-health program at Aga Khan University, has suggested that laws should be put into place to “accommodate and mainstream [e-health].” According to Dr. Yunkap Kwankam of the International Society for Telemedicine and eHealth, “for eHealth to take root and thrive…it must itself be transformed…we must weave eHealth into the fabric of the health system.”
Dr. Kwankam claims that Africans can benefit from technology changes by effectively managing it and charting a course for ICT in health through an organized eHealth profession, national eHealth policies and strategies, and addressing large eHealth challenges, such as scaling up eHealth interventions.
Dr. Kwankam and other experts’ presentations from the conference are now available.