Africa's tech hubs supporting e-health solutions in Africa

Africa’s tech hubs supporting e-health solutions in Africa

0
750
Spread the love

Africa’s tech hubs have grown to a new record of 643 across the continent providing the backbone of Africa’s tech ecosystem.

Increased internet penetration and affordability in Africa have created a robust tech ecosystem that youthful entrepreneurs are using to create homegrown software tools for better dispensation of healthcare, financial, education, and energy services among others.

This has precipitated a tech explosion mainly in major cities and towns that now house tech hubs acting as knowledge resource centres for an emerging crop of ‘techpreneurs’.

They converge to think out aloud on various challenges and moot technological innovations from records, payments and attendance management systems thereby benefiting the populace with the introduction of subscription-based mass-market software products.

Last year, Rwanda became the home of HealthTech Hub Africa, a HealthTech-inclined accelerator, whose mission is to help governments and startups to collaborate on technology-enabled innovations that strengthen health systems in Africa.

Founded by Novartis Foundation in partnership with Norrsken East Africa, the accelerator, a first on the continent, intends to support local authorities tackle the largest health challenges in low-income and underserved populations.

According to a 2019 survey by Briter Bridges and AfriLabs called ‘Building a conducive setting for innovators to thrive, Africa’s tech hubs have grown to a new record of 643 across the continent providing the backbone of Africa’s tech ecosystem. This presents an opportunity for greater growth as 41 percent of these facilities are incubators, 24 percent are innovation hubs, 14 percent are accelerators, and 39 percent offer co-working spaces. 

Rwanda’s HealthTech Hub Africa will support technology innovations tackling public health system challenges in Africa and will host up to 30 startups, guiding them to test, validate and scale up their solutions beyond the region.

The goal is to strengthen the local HealthTech network by creating more opportunities for collaboration and exchange between policymakers and innovators. This will help realise the SDG declaration that emphasizes on the overall health goal, Universal Health Coverage, and access to quality health care without getting into financial difficulties or, worse, being pushed into poverty by 2030.

Apart from capability building, the startups are also getting partnership opportunities with public and private sector players. The private sector perspective encompasses the introduction of cutting-edge digital technologies and novel business models that benefit the organisation, the startup, and consumers. At the government level, financial incentives for investors and large national companies have the potential to further develop the hubs into foreign investment attractors-via equity stakes in the startups and act as talent hubs for the youthful continent.

With research (WHO, 2016) showing almost 50 percent of hospital admissions and deaths are from non-communicable diseases, the techies aim to develop virtual care solutions for cardiovascular diseases, among others, to not only ease congestion in our health facilities but also bolster home-based care programmes and improve UHC enrolment that will ride on tailored payment mechanisms convenient to the diverse socio-economic groups.

In the long run, solutions from the health hub should help in improving the accuracy and timeliness of data, reducing misdiagnosis due to gaps in patient data thereby fostering treatment efficiency and helping prevent burnout currently experienced by caregivers.

In East Africa, the role of the private sector in healthcare is growing and leaders across the sectors are keen on unifying diverse players across the ecosystem to grow innovative solutions.

Thus, the HealthTech hub is one of those initiatives that will go a long way in impacting the socio-economic well-being of patients. This, coupled with the improved government policies on health and investment in breakthrough treatments, will ensure that healthcare is delivered across the population pyramid in an effective, efficient, and economical manner.

The writer is the Cluster Head – Novartis East Africa

Comments are closed.