Title :
Making Health Care More Accessible to Rural Communities in Waslala, Nicaragua Using Low-Cost Telecommunications
Author :
Singh, Pritpal ; Kulkarni, Sarvesh ; Keech, Elizabeth ; McDermott-Levy, Ruth ; Klingler, James
Author_Institution :
Villanova Univ., Villanova, PA, USA
fDate :
Oct. 30 2011-Nov. 1 2011
Abstract :
In rural Nicaragua, access to health care professionals and medical facilities is limited. Minimally trained community health workers (CHWs) and understaffed clinical outposts serve rural communities. Rural residents rarely see a doctor except in emergencies. This can lead to situations where treatable medical condition can become life threatening. The goal of our project is to preempt such situations through: better training of CHWs, using cellular short messages (SMS) to encode and transmit basic health information such as vital signs and health symptoms to a monitoring computer, algorithms on the monitoring computer to recognize emergent conditions, system generated notification informing the community health worker of the appropriate response related to the inputted vital signs and symptoms and storage of medical histories for future use. An important consideration is to make the project entirely self-sustainable through entrepreneurial means and to impart enough knowledge base to the participants to preserve the momentum even as the initial promoters´ active involvement gradually ceases.
Keywords :
cellular radio; electronic messaging; encoding; health care; medical information systems; mobile handsets; telemedicine; Nicaragua; Waslala; cellular phone network; cellular short messages; community health workers; computer monitoring; health care; health information encoding; low-cost telecommunications; medical facility; telemedicine; Business; Cellular phones; Communities; Computers; Hospitals; Training; SMS; cellular phones; mobile phones; rural health care; telehealth; telemedicine;
Conference_Titel :
Global Humanitarian Technology Conference (GHTC), 2011 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Seattle, WA
Print_ISBN :
978-1-61284-634-7
Electronic_ISBN :
978-0-7695-4595-0
DOI :
10.1109/GHTC.2011.28