Showing posts with label tele-healthcare. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tele-healthcare. Show all posts

Sunday, June 22, 2008

Cybernet Installs Satellite at UM Healthcare Trust


So it is official now. Cybernet, Pakistan's largest Internet Service Provider, as part of their Corporate Social Responsibility, has donated dedicated internet access via VSAT Satellite to UM Healthcare Trust's medical hospital in remote village of Zahidabad, Mardan District, NWFP, Pakistan.

The satellite based internet access will enable us to run Tele-healthcare services in collaboration with APPNA doctors in the USA as well as perform analysis on medical records to track pandemic diseases in real time using NUST's SUN based cluster for high performance computing.

This is yet another positive step towards the realization of extending affordable healthcare to the rural and needy population of Mardan District using ICT.

Cybernet and UM Healthcare Trust will be replicating this tele-healthcare services at other medical facilities in rural areas as well and connecting them with specialists and doctors in the cities.

Sunday, February 17, 2008

The project got funded!

So this has just been confirmed. The Jaroka tele-health project, that we are developing has received further boost as it successfully received joint grant funding from USAID and HEC. Our's was one of the 19 applications that got funded from a pool of 116. The funding is for two years, commencing from April 1, 2008 to develop and deploy the Jaroka tele-health system for rural Mardan district (NWFP, Pakistan) and for capacity building of local healthcare professionals including Lady Health Workers. The project will also deploy Pakistan's first mobile based tele-health services in rural Pakistan. Once successful, it will be replicated in other parts/districts of Pakistan.

The project provides financial support to procure medical equipment, essential hardware to run tele-health services and even covers the salaries of two medical doctors and other healthcare professionals..

Our partners in this grant are APPNA, NUST, UM Healthcare Trust and Cogilent Solutions.

Friday, January 11, 2008

Give youth a chance

The health statistics of the whole province (North West Frontier Province, NWFP) are nothing short of a health disaster. These numbers are further worsened by the influx of millions of Afghan refugees who have made the province their home for the past three decades or so. We, as part of UM Healthcare Trust, are involved in building a free hospital for the rural community of the Mardan District and also a site for our Tele-healthcare initiative.


Location

District Mardan, NWFP, Pakistan

Populationon

1.6 Million

District Hospitals

2

Basic Health Units

50

Infant Mortality Rate

76/1000 child births

Maternal Mortality

201/1000 live births

For a population of over 1.6 million in Mardan District, there are just 2 district hospitals with a less than hundred beds. The Basic Health Units (BHUs) are one room clinics and if operational (usually they are locked with no one on duty) sometimes manned by a doctor or a healthcare professional. The primary purpose of these units is to provide vaccinations (especially to children) and occasional trainings on preventive medicine (to the rural population). It is no wonder that 70% of the population of Pakistan (WHO statistic) never gets to see a doctor in their entire life. For a country of 160 Million people, that is a gigantic population (almost 110 million) without access to basic healthcare.

The north of the Pakistan suffers from heavy unemployment as well. Major source of jobs in NWFP includes agriculture, mining of precious stones, granite/marble quarries, and government jobs. Other than these, there are hardly any other job opportunities for the youth. The industrialization and economic uplift that we get to see in major metropolitan cities like Lahore, Karachi and Islamabad is totally non-existent here. In other words, the economic boom (that has griped the urban centers of the country) has had little impact on the rural communities.

The government school system in the rural areas has also not grown over the years. In fact, it is straining under the pressure of over population. The private schools are too expensive and therefore the local communities never send their children to study. With the result, an uneducated population grows up that has no real prospect of securing jobs even in the more competitive bigger cities. Those who still want to get an education then prefer to enroll in the local religious schools called, madarasas.

With no employment, no healthcare and no prospects of a better life, many of the talented, prefer to emigrate or work abroad especially in the Middle East. They spend years toiling in the heat of the desert without seeing their families for years while sending back precious dinars so that their kids could one day have a better life.

But not all are lucky to find a job locally or go abroad. Those with no sustained income usually end up being pulled into the lucrative drug trade between the Afghanistan and Pakistan border areas. Or as it is now commonly happening, become members of some radical religious organization.

These youths are victim of their environment and society. If we want them to succeed and give up drug trade and put down their AK-47s and suicide bombings then we need to give them what is their basic right as a human being. Namely, a chance for a better education, improved healthcare and ability to become entrepreneurs (or have secure jobs). No amount of carpet bombing or military actions can stop them from becoming radical. But a book, a job and better health can transform them and their families forever.

Edhi Foundation, Central Asia Institute, The Citizen's Foundation and many other such non-profits believe that the world can be a better place if we just give youth a chance. Sadly, this doctrine is lost on the current leaders of the world who are bent upon changing the world with their might, bombs and cruise missiles.

Friday, March 16, 2007

Stanford University and NIIT Collaboration

NUST Institute of Information technology (NIIT) and Stanford University, USA are currently collaborating on Tele-healthcare initiative of Reuters Digital Vision Program (DVP). DVP is geared to bringing together people engaged in developing technology-based solutions to address humanitarian, educational, and sustainable development issues.

Mr. Atif Mumtaz is the proposer and initiater of Jaroka, Tele-healthcare for rural communities, one of the major ongoing DVP projects. Jaroka is a web-based tele-healthcare portal that enables clinicians operating in rural and disaster-affected communities to rapidly access expert advice and opinions from specialists around the world. NIIT has formed a dedicated team comprising its faculty members and young students to make this project a viable success. The project is progressing under the supervision of Dr. Arshad Ali (Director General NIIT). Actively associated with the project are Dr. Amir Shafi, Mr. Adnan Iqbal, Ms. Shamila Keyani, and a dedicated band of NIIT students. The project team is now working towards telemedicine initiative within the NIIT premises. Seminars on relevant topics are held every Wednesday and progress of the students is monitored on a regular basis. NIIT has been able to persuade Army Medical College (AMC) to institute their first medical collaboration with NIIT and Stanford.

NUST Institute of Information Technology is committed to putting forth a novel and stimulating research idea and an equally conducive research environment for its incubation and fruition. The main impetus behind this effort and commitment is the passion to pursue projects bearing on fulfillment of high-value social and national needs in the commercially competitive world of today. NIIT-Stanford collaboration is destined to greatly facilitate development of cutting edge technology in the field of Tele-health care.

Saturday, April 15, 2006

Skardu Telemedicine


Tele-healthcare's jaroka project, in collaboration with APPNA, Digital Vision Program at Stanford University and COMSATS have initiated a pilot project for testing and studying the prospects of managing a remote telemedicine center with specialists located in the USA. The remote health facility is located in Skardu Pakistan, a remote town in the Himalayan mountainous region of Pakistan.

The details of the project can be found on Tele-healthcare website under Skardu Project.

It should be noted that this is Pakistan's first Tele-medicine project which connected patients in a rural Skardu with international specialists in Boston, USA.


Friday, September 23, 2005

What is Jaroka?

Our mission is to develop and deploy an affordable, sustainable, easily replicative internet based Tele-medicine healthcare system through which patients in rural Pakistan are connected with doctors and specialists in the cities for diagnosis and treatment. This way we can reduce the untimely deaths, complications and increase prevention of pandemic diseases in rural areas.

Why Jaroka?


70% of Pakistanis get their health care needs through Lady Health Workers (LHW) rather than a doctor. LHW are local women, who are provided basic health care training by the government or United Nations, residing in villages. Each woman, on average, serves a community of 1000 citizens.

There are 5,000 BHUs in Pakistan that serve as the clinics for rural Pakistan. These centers may or may not have a full-time doctor and are usually staffed only by a pharmacist or a nurse. Nevertheless, these centers are the first level of contact with medical facilities beyond LHW.