Skip Navigation

卫生: 看护标准

新闻

  • 打印
  • 发表评论
  • | 共享

Rural medics to get mobile advice 'hotline'

Tatum Anderson

2009年4月7日 | EN | FR

Better connections: both health workers and ordinary people can gain access to health information with their mobiles

Flickr/kiwanja

A pilot initiative to provide rural community health workers, nurses and doctors with advice on diagnosis and treatment via mobile phones is to launch in Ghana later this year.

The project will enable rural health workers to call specially-trained doctors at a call centre, providing the daily support that health workers in richer countries take for granted.

"Rural health workers often are trained once and receive limited support and supervision for their day-to-day activities. They often feel isolated," says Patricia Mechael, mobile-health and telemedicine advisor for the Millennium Villages Project, a large-scale rural development initiative coordinated by the Earth Institute at Columbia University in the United States.

A health worker might ring for advice on whether a child they have visited at home should be referred for more testing or treatment, for example.

The health hotline is one of many mobile-health (m-health) pilots run by the Millennium Villages Project.

A number of such hotlines have sprung up in countries such as Bangladesh, India, Mexico and Pakistan — many of which aim to provide consumers rather than health professionals with advice and diagnosis from doctors.

Health hotlines could have tremendous potential because about two thirds of mobile phone users worldwide live in developing countries and many have limited access to health services, says Gautam Ivatury, a consultant specialising in mobile services and development.

"It has a chance to be the primary way that people get medical information," he says.

A survey of callers to the Bangladeshi HealthLine service found that more than half live below the poverty line or in rural areas.

Health hotlines have taken off faster than other m-health applications — such as using mobile devices to record and transmit disease surveillance information — because they earn money, says Ivatury. In future new applications such as text-based prescriptions and remote monitoring for patients with chronic disease could be added. 

Such services might create sustainability because call charges can cover costs. But evidence from Bangladesh and India suggests prices — of around 20 US cents for a three-minute call — are still too high for the poorest.

Hotlines are also easier and cheaper to deploy than applications that require specialist handsets, software and training. Mechael says rural health professionals often need training on how to use the data functions of a mobile phone. 

But while they may not necessarily generate revenue, such specialist applications are key and have "the potential to support healthcare workers and improve health outcomes", says Mechael.

添加你的评论

这是您的网络:张贴您的评论,和别人分享您关于我们的任何文章的观点。

您需要注册后发表评论或者给作者发送评论的邮件。请登陆或注册。 登陆 或者 注册.

所有的评论都要接受审核,我们保留对评中包括 不适当/不适合的语言进行编辑的权利。科学与发展网络享有网站发布所有内容的版权。请查看使用条款了解详情。

只要适当标明来源与作者就可以免费复制科学与发展网络所有内容。更多详情请参见 发表评论.

返回 新闻
到达顶部