Kenya Healthcare

Revitalizing Kenya’s Healthcare: President Ruto’s Vision and Reforms

Spread the love

Kenya’s healthcare sector is the scene of innovative and promising change. The country is on a mission to revitalize and upgrade its healthcare capabilities and service offerings, an effort led by President Ruto, who has advocated several healthcare reforms. These include reforming the National Health Insurance Fund to become a social health insurance provider, improving medical supply procurements, and deploying an integrated health information system.

Technology and IT can play a key role in improving Kenya’s healthcare sector and enable it to provide quality, reliable service to the nation’s citizens. By investing in the right solutions and architecture, organizations can unlock new functions and methods of working, digitize existing ones, and ensure interoperability and efficiency across technology ecosystems.

Ongoing challenges

Though Kenya ranks highly in Africa in its readiness to provide quality medical services, the sector faces significant hurdles, such as low recruitment numbers and limited coverage. The provision of health services is also hampered by poor availability and quality of infrastructure, which demand that service providers explore other means of getting that service to the people who need it most.

And, while there is a drive to deploy new technologies to reform healthcare, that drive is not without constraints. For example, public hospitals in Kenya are increasingly purchasing digital health systems to support administrative functions, replacing paper-based systems as part of a trend initially exhibited by high-income countries. However, a significant amount of work is needed to ensure the interoperability of those systems within facilities and with other government services. Interoperability, along with system

The promise of technology

Digital health – the application of ICT to provide healthcare interventions and improve the quality of service – isn’t a new trend by any means. But it is establishing a foothold across Africa, spurred on by digital transformation and the construction of critical infrastructure.

According to an analysis by McKinsey to determine the financial impact of digital health tools in Kenya, Nigeria, and South Africa, it was found the three countries could capture efficiencies of up to 15% in total healthcare expenditures by 2030. Furthermore, the widespread adoption of digital health tools in Kenya could unlock up to $2.5 billion, 14% of the country’s total projected spending on healthcare.

Notably, Kenya is also home to an inspiring health tech sector, with many start-ups working to innovate and transform the various components of healthcare service delivery. These include communication platforms that connect patients with hospitals and healthcare professionals, end-to-end information services, and medication sales and distribution. Innovation thrives on adaptable, trusted infrastructure for product development, data compliance, scalability, and fostering organizational growth and interoperability.

The ingredients of tech-enabled healthcare

As more healthcare organizations use data to increase their efficiency and improve their service delivery, they require flexible infrastructure that offers real-time insights and functionality where it matters most, i.e. the patients and those at the point of care. To do that, they need to deploy the right IT solutions.

This process begins with a simplification. By running cloud-native applications on hybrid cloud infrastructure, and utilizing containers and IT automation, organizations become more agile. They can access new data and insights and apply them where they have maximum impact.

Organizations need to move past the traditional, transactional usage of their data. To do that, they need to ensure connectivity and compatibility among different information systems. This is made possible by open-source platforms that remove data silos while processing large volumes across multiple devices and destinations. An open-source approach also prevents vendor lock-in, giving organizations freedom of choice for future deployments.

Healthcare organizations are also the keepers of sensitive data. Therefore, security and compliance are essential. Automated security and protection solutions can secure cloud environments throughout application life cycles. At the same time, it can reduce downtime and effort needed to perform routine tasks.

No need for high costs or in-house tech; organizations can access capabilities without heavy expenses or prior expertise. Vendors and utilizing the available infrastructure, Kenya’s healthcare organizations can leverage industry-leading IT solutions that demonstrate their commitment to care.

SOURCE: https://www.itnewsafrica.com/

AHIT

Recent Posts

South Africa steps up cancer data gathering

By: Elna Schütz [JOHANNESBURG] South Africa has begun collecting data on cancer directly from patients…

2 months ago

Kenya’s healthcare system needs immersive technologies

Kenya's healthcare system faces numerous challenges, including limited access to specialists, uneven distribution of resources…

3 months ago

Adoption of Technology to Address Africa’s Healthcare Challenges

Technological transformation has   been  advocated for a sweeping technological transformation to confront the critical healthcare…

3 months ago

AI a ‘potent remedy’ for Africa’s health challenges

By: Jackie Opara [LAGOS] Artificial Intelligence (AI) could emerge as a potent remedy for long-standing…

3 months ago

HealthTech Hub Africa receives support to fast-track health tech innovation.s across the continent.

The African Development Bank Group has entered into an agreement with the HealthTech Hub Africa…

3 months ago

Tanzania: Dawa Mkononi secures funding to enhance healthcare access

Dawa Mkononi, a B2B pharmaceutical firm based in Tanzania, focused on using innovation to improve…

4 months ago