Co-produced mobile consulting for remote, marginalised communities in Africa
Lead Research Organisation:
University of Warwick
Department Name: Warwick Medical School
Abstract
It is a United Nations Sustainable Development Goal to achieve universal health coverage with access to quality healthcare for all. Our network plans to evaluate the contribution to this goal of mobile consulting (mConsulting). This is when patients consult with health providers about their health using digital communication. Our concern is remote, marginalised communities in Africa that have difficulty accessing quality health care.
The digital infrastructure of Africa is its best infrastructure - much better than the roads, and most people own a mobile phone. We want to test whether using digital infrastructure for mConsulting improves access to quality healthcare for remote, marginalised communities and whether this is sustainable. mConsulting needs to be affordable to the community and for providers. However, improved healthcare can improve the health of the community and so increase economic activity and use of mConsulting can stimulate investment in digital infrastructure benefiting the community.
Commercial companies are delivering mConsulting services in Africa. Currently they target urban communities but could extend their reach to remote communities. In addition to good mobile signal and sustainable business models they need community acceptance and integration with local providers for certain diagnostic tests and treatments. Existing health services (public or private) can add mConsulting to their services e.g. a health worker using a mobile phone for consulting. This needs planning to ensure professional standards and patient acceptability.
We are academics/researchers, mConsulting providers and policy organisations. Four of the academic/research teams (Kenya, Nigeria, Tanzania and UK) have collaborated on research and research capacity building for ten years. We have extended our team to further organisations in our countries and in Uganda and Rwanda. Our expertise includes, technical, medical, nursing, education, social and behavioural science, health systems, economics and epidemiology.
We aim to evaluate the impact of mConsulting on healthcare access and health outcomes for remote marginalised communities and explore how it can be optimally delivered. We will do this in varied contexts of East and West Africa so we learn what works well (or not) in different places, with different histories, policies and health systems. Our results will be relevant to diverse settings across Africa.
To do this we will develop a research proposal for funding. We will first use the seed network funding to:
1. Extend and consolidate our networks to include all relevant and necessary people/organisations;
2. Work with remote community representatives, local healthcare providers, mConsulting providers, policy makers (and telecommunication providers where needed) to collaboratively identify plans for mConsulting including challenges to be overcome before implementation and evaluation;
3. Explore innovative ways of working across commercial, research and policy sectors to build research capacity and create opportunities for exchange.
We expect our follow-on research will evaluate mConsulting for primary care, for certain types of health problems e.g. acute conditions, long-term conditions, child and maternal health, mental health. Our choice will depend on what is priority for the communities. Our research objectives are to:
I) Evaluate whether mConsulting results in change in community access to healthcare and in measures of health outcomes for selected tracer conditions (e.g. blood pressure for hypertension, patient reported symptoms for depression);
II) Evaluate what aspects of mConsulting work well (or not), where, when and for whom. We will observe, interview and collect activity data;
III) Identify contextual factors that need to change to ensure scalability of mConsulting (e.g. professional training, regulations, financing).
The digital infrastructure of Africa is its best infrastructure - much better than the roads, and most people own a mobile phone. We want to test whether using digital infrastructure for mConsulting improves access to quality healthcare for remote, marginalised communities and whether this is sustainable. mConsulting needs to be affordable to the community and for providers. However, improved healthcare can improve the health of the community and so increase economic activity and use of mConsulting can stimulate investment in digital infrastructure benefiting the community.
Commercial companies are delivering mConsulting services in Africa. Currently they target urban communities but could extend their reach to remote communities. In addition to good mobile signal and sustainable business models they need community acceptance and integration with local providers for certain diagnostic tests and treatments. Existing health services (public or private) can add mConsulting to their services e.g. a health worker using a mobile phone for consulting. This needs planning to ensure professional standards and patient acceptability.
We are academics/researchers, mConsulting providers and policy organisations. Four of the academic/research teams (Kenya, Nigeria, Tanzania and UK) have collaborated on research and research capacity building for ten years. We have extended our team to further organisations in our countries and in Uganda and Rwanda. Our expertise includes, technical, medical, nursing, education, social and behavioural science, health systems, economics and epidemiology.
We aim to evaluate the impact of mConsulting on healthcare access and health outcomes for remote marginalised communities and explore how it can be optimally delivered. We will do this in varied contexts of East and West Africa so we learn what works well (or not) in different places, with different histories, policies and health systems. Our results will be relevant to diverse settings across Africa.
To do this we will develop a research proposal for funding. We will first use the seed network funding to:
1. Extend and consolidate our networks to include all relevant and necessary people/organisations;
2. Work with remote community representatives, local healthcare providers, mConsulting providers, policy makers (and telecommunication providers where needed) to collaboratively identify plans for mConsulting including challenges to be overcome before implementation and evaluation;
3. Explore innovative ways of working across commercial, research and policy sectors to build research capacity and create opportunities for exchange.
We expect our follow-on research will evaluate mConsulting for primary care, for certain types of health problems e.g. acute conditions, long-term conditions, child and maternal health, mental health. Our choice will depend on what is priority for the communities. Our research objectives are to:
I) Evaluate whether mConsulting results in change in community access to healthcare and in measures of health outcomes for selected tracer conditions (e.g. blood pressure for hypertension, patient reported symptoms for depression);
II) Evaluate what aspects of mConsulting work well (or not), where, when and for whom. We will observe, interview and collect activity data;
III) Identify contextual factors that need to change to ensure scalability of mConsulting (e.g. professional training, regulations, financing).
Planned Impact
The Network and follow-on study (longer-term) are expected to benefit and impact on:
a) Remote marginalised communities in the study sites, participating countries, regions and elsewhere through:
- Identification of relevant, implementable pathways to mConsulting, grounded in community needs/concerns (through co-production);
- Encouraging the implementation of accessible, affordable and acceptable mConsulting services (for users-providers) (follow-on grant and beyond);
- Quality mConsulting is anticipated to improve healthcare access and health outcomes in remote communities by reducing distances and cost barriers, and hoped to improve trust between communities/users and healthcare providers;
- Implementation of mConsulting will potentially attract investment in digital infrastructure and access for remote communities, increasing economic growth;
- Co-production will provide evidence for challenges and barriers to mConsulting, which may support community efforts to promote change/address key determinants.
b) Partner organisations (immediately) and other mConsulting providers (longer-term) delivering or planning mConsulting in remote marginal areas (commercial, not-for-profit, public sector) through:
- Interdisciplinary, inter-sectoral knowledge exchange and cross-site learning;
- Insights into potential markets for mConsulting, potentially contributing towards business growth which would feed into wider economic development;
- Planning (and implementation) of appropriate business models, with longer-term impact expected through sustainability and relevance of work;
- Evaluation and feedback for partners about their services, to enable their learning and adaptation;
- Efficiency gains and commercial opportunities to support innovative business solutions and digital health.
c) Local, national and regional health policies and systems through:
- Strengthening of regional networks and evidence-informed evaluation of mConsulting services in remote communities
- Providing evidence for scalability of mConsulting in different contexts in Africa, with identification of contextual factors that enable or inhibit its success in impacting on health need
- Strengthened research capacity in digital health research and innovation in Africa, particularly implementation of digital health solutions for marginalised communities.
- Reciprocal learning across all contexts.
d) Practitioners and Industry in Sub-Saharan Africa through:
- Development of pathways to mConsulting, with plans for how to 'get there'. These may prompt similar approaches and planning for pathways to mobile services in other industries seeking to capitalise on the continent's high mobile penetration rates;
- In the follow-on study, evidence for scalability of services may similarly support other forms of digital innovation and provide direction on where to focus investment, in a coordinated manner;
- Practitioners and Industry need to develop innovations that improve health and well-being yet many lack the skills to study and understand drivers of utilisation of services. Our study will provide a model to enable practitioners and industry representatives to work with researchers to address these skills gaps and related challenges.
e) Policy and decision-makers (inter/national, regional) with provision of evidence for:
- Use and scalability of digital technology in consultations in health and other sectors (e.g. agriculture);
- Planning, implementing and evaluating whether and how mConsulting can contribute to the UN Sustainable Development Goals of universal health coverage, gender equality, and industry, innovation and infrastructure.
a) Remote marginalised communities in the study sites, participating countries, regions and elsewhere through:
- Identification of relevant, implementable pathways to mConsulting, grounded in community needs/concerns (through co-production);
- Encouraging the implementation of accessible, affordable and acceptable mConsulting services (for users-providers) (follow-on grant and beyond);
- Quality mConsulting is anticipated to improve healthcare access and health outcomes in remote communities by reducing distances and cost barriers, and hoped to improve trust between communities/users and healthcare providers;
- Implementation of mConsulting will potentially attract investment in digital infrastructure and access for remote communities, increasing economic growth;
- Co-production will provide evidence for challenges and barriers to mConsulting, which may support community efforts to promote change/address key determinants.
b) Partner organisations (immediately) and other mConsulting providers (longer-term) delivering or planning mConsulting in remote marginal areas (commercial, not-for-profit, public sector) through:
- Interdisciplinary, inter-sectoral knowledge exchange and cross-site learning;
- Insights into potential markets for mConsulting, potentially contributing towards business growth which would feed into wider economic development;
- Planning (and implementation) of appropriate business models, with longer-term impact expected through sustainability and relevance of work;
- Evaluation and feedback for partners about their services, to enable their learning and adaptation;
- Efficiency gains and commercial opportunities to support innovative business solutions and digital health.
c) Local, national and regional health policies and systems through:
- Strengthening of regional networks and evidence-informed evaluation of mConsulting services in remote communities
- Providing evidence for scalability of mConsulting in different contexts in Africa, with identification of contextual factors that enable or inhibit its success in impacting on health need
- Strengthened research capacity in digital health research and innovation in Africa, particularly implementation of digital health solutions for marginalised communities.
- Reciprocal learning across all contexts.
d) Practitioners and Industry in Sub-Saharan Africa through:
- Development of pathways to mConsulting, with plans for how to 'get there'. These may prompt similar approaches and planning for pathways to mobile services in other industries seeking to capitalise on the continent's high mobile penetration rates;
- In the follow-on study, evidence for scalability of services may similarly support other forms of digital innovation and provide direction on where to focus investment, in a coordinated manner;
- Practitioners and Industry need to develop innovations that improve health and well-being yet many lack the skills to study and understand drivers of utilisation of services. Our study will provide a model to enable practitioners and industry representatives to work with researchers to address these skills gaps and related challenges.
e) Policy and decision-makers (inter/national, regional) with provision of evidence for:
- Use and scalability of digital technology in consultations in health and other sectors (e.g. agriculture);
- Planning, implementing and evaluating whether and how mConsulting can contribute to the UN Sustainable Development Goals of universal health coverage, gender equality, and industry, innovation and infrastructure.
Organisations
- University of Warwick (Lead Research Organisation)
- Makerere University (Collaboration)
- MOBIHEALTH INTERNATIONAL LTD (Collaboration)
- Ministry of Health and Social Welfare (Collaboration)
- International Society for Telemedicine and eHealth (ISfTeH) (Collaboration)
- Medical Concierge Group (TMCG) (Collaboration)
- St. Francis University College of Health and Allied Sciences (Collaboration)
- East African Science and Technology Commission (EASTECO) (Collaboration)
- University of Ibadan (Collaboration)
- UNIVERSITY OF BIRMINGHAM (Collaboration)
- African Population and Health Research Center (Collaboration)
- Babylon Health (Collaboration, Project Partner)
- KING'S COLLEGE LONDON (Collaboration)
- Society for Telemedicine and eHealth NG (Project Partner)
- The Medical Concierge Group Limited (Project Partner)
- ADA Health (Project Partner)
- MobiHealth International (Project Partner)
Publications



Zharima C
(2023)
Exploring the barriers and facilitators to implementing electronic health records in a middle-income country: a qualitative study from South Africa.
in Frontiers in digital health
Description | Developed training package Piloted training package Established consortium - in particular established a relationship with relevant industry partners in DAC countries Secured further funding to further trial training package Improved the skillset of healthcare workers in DAC countries |
Exploitation Route | The training package is available for use for training health workers globally. It is available at no cost for not-for-profit use. It is suitable for delivery by healthcare providers to their front line workers and for delivery by healthcare education organisations. |
Sectors | Digital/Communication/Information Technologies (including Software) Healthcare |
URL | https://warwick.ac.uk/fac/sci/med/about/centres/wcfgh/research/remoteconsulting/ |
Description | In Tanzania, in the face of COVID-19, we initiated change from face-to-face patient consulting in primary care to the delivery of remote consulting by healthcare workers serving communities in remote, rural contexts. We are undertaking an evaluation of remote consulting in Nigeria and Tanzania |
First Year Of Impact | 2021 |
Sector | Digital/Communication/Information Technologies (including Software),Healthcare |
Impact Types | Policy & public services |
Description | Training on remote consulting delivered to healthcare workers in a remote rural region of Tanzania |
Geographic Reach | Local/Municipal/Regional |
Policy Influence Type | Influenced training of practitioners or researchers |
Impact | In the face of COVID-19, we designed and remotely delivered training in the use of remote consulting to 12 registered health workers in Ulanga District in rural Tanzani (using their own phones). Trainees were selected from rural and marginalized communities where telecoms infrastructure is variable. Trainees included: Six medical doctors, five Assistant Medical Officers and one Pharmacist. The training was organised and facilitated by the SFUCHAS research team. The 12 trained healthcare workers then cascaded the training to 63 other health workers of different cadres in their facilities/district, including community health workers. Our impact and process evaluation found that the health workers were upskilled to deliver primary care in remote patient consultation and they were practising remote consulting with community members, although there were some challenges with connectivity. Additionally, the training contributed to teamwork and improved communication skills amongst healthcare workers. |
Description | GCRF_NF151 COVID19:Determining trustworthiness and safety of REmote Consulting in primary healthcare (REaCH) for chronic disease populations in Africa |
Amount | £819,596 (GBP) |
Funding ID | EP/V028936/1 |
Organisation | Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) |
Sector | Public |
Country | United Kingdom |
Start | 07/2020 |
End | 02/2022 |
Description | HRQ:Reevaluating the Remote: a realist evaluation of the practical, epistemological and ethical status of remote qualitative data collection in health |
Amount | £422,352 (GBP) |
Funding ID | MR/W021161/1 |
Organisation | Medical Research Council (MRC) |
Sector | Public |
Country | United Kingdom |
Start | 04/2022 |
End | 02/2024 |
Description | Prevention of osteoporosis through early monitoring of multiple measures of bone health in one device |
Amount | £272,897 (GBP) |
Funding ID | EP/X000958/1 |
Organisation | Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) |
Sector | Public |
Country | United Kingdom |
Start | 03/2023 |
End | 02/2025 |
Description | The Digital Good Network: exploring equity, sustainability and resilience in people's relationships with and through digital technologies |
Amount | £3,303,857 (GBP) |
Funding ID | ES/X502352/1 |
Organisation | Economic and Social Research Council |
Sector | Public |
Country | United Kingdom |
Start | 11/2022 |
End | 10/2027 |
Description | Collaboration with Tanzania Ministry of Health on dissemination of training on remote consultation to frontline health workers |
Organisation | Ministry of Health and Social Welfare |
Country | Tanzania, United Republic of |
Sector | Public |
PI Contribution | Content of training course; piloting of training course |
Collaborator Contribution | Platform for hosting training course; approving continuing professional development points for course which will encourage health workers to take the course |
Impact | Work in progress to make training available on government platform |
Start Year | 2021 |
Description | DIDA mConsulting network |
Organisation | African Population and Health Research Center |
Country | Kenya |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | Intellectual input, training and capacity building of staff, mentorship, development of successful grant application (REaCH trial - EPSRC (GCRF_NF) funded), programme leadership, network development and facilitation, development of stage 2 grant application |
Collaborator Contribution | Academic partners provided intellectual input, training and capacity building of staff, mentorship, development of successful grant application (REaCH trial - EPSRC (GCRF_NF) funded), further development of training package, undertook pilot study of training package, development of stage 2 grant application Non academic collaborators provided information and intelligence regarding the current and future plans for remote healthcare provision (including policy, infrastructure, funding) in countries including: Tanzania, Uganda, Rwanda, Nigeria, Kenya |
Impact | The academic partners successfully secured an £819,596 award from EPSRC (GCRF_NF) based on the work undertaken in this grant. The academic partners in the DAC countries now have well established relationships with healthcare/tech companies for future work. |
Start Year | 2020 |
Description | DIDA mConsulting network |
Organisation | Babylon Health |
Country | United Kingdom |
Sector | Private |
PI Contribution | Intellectual input, training and capacity building of staff, mentorship, development of successful grant application (REaCH trial - EPSRC (GCRF_NF) funded), programme leadership, network development and facilitation, development of stage 2 grant application |
Collaborator Contribution | Academic partners provided intellectual input, training and capacity building of staff, mentorship, development of successful grant application (REaCH trial - EPSRC (GCRF_NF) funded), further development of training package, undertook pilot study of training package, development of stage 2 grant application Non academic collaborators provided information and intelligence regarding the current and future plans for remote healthcare provision (including policy, infrastructure, funding) in countries including: Tanzania, Uganda, Rwanda, Nigeria, Kenya |
Impact | The academic partners successfully secured an £819,596 award from EPSRC (GCRF_NF) based on the work undertaken in this grant. The academic partners in the DAC countries now have well established relationships with healthcare/tech companies for future work. |
Start Year | 2020 |
Description | DIDA mConsulting network |
Organisation | East African Science and Technology Commission (EASTECO) |
Country | Rwanda |
Sector | Charity/Non Profit |
PI Contribution | Intellectual input, training and capacity building of staff, mentorship, development of successful grant application (REaCH trial - EPSRC (GCRF_NF) funded), programme leadership, network development and facilitation, development of stage 2 grant application |
Collaborator Contribution | Academic partners provided intellectual input, training and capacity building of staff, mentorship, development of successful grant application (REaCH trial - EPSRC (GCRF_NF) funded), further development of training package, undertook pilot study of training package, development of stage 2 grant application Non academic collaborators provided information and intelligence regarding the current and future plans for remote healthcare provision (including policy, infrastructure, funding) in countries including: Tanzania, Uganda, Rwanda, Nigeria, Kenya |
Impact | The academic partners successfully secured an £819,596 award from EPSRC (GCRF_NF) based on the work undertaken in this grant. The academic partners in the DAC countries now have well established relationships with healthcare/tech companies for future work. |
Start Year | 2020 |
Description | DIDA mConsulting network |
Organisation | International Society for Telemedicine and eHealth (ISfTeH) |
Department | Society for Telemedicine and eHealth in Nigeria |
Country | Nigeria |
Sector | Charity/Non Profit |
PI Contribution | Intellectual input, training and capacity building of staff, mentorship, development of successful grant application (REaCH trial - EPSRC (GCRF_NF) funded), programme leadership, network development and facilitation, development of stage 2 grant application |
Collaborator Contribution | Academic partners provided intellectual input, training and capacity building of staff, mentorship, development of successful grant application (REaCH trial - EPSRC (GCRF_NF) funded), further development of training package, undertook pilot study of training package, development of stage 2 grant application Non academic collaborators provided information and intelligence regarding the current and future plans for remote healthcare provision (including policy, infrastructure, funding) in countries including: Tanzania, Uganda, Rwanda, Nigeria, Kenya |
Impact | The academic partners successfully secured an £819,596 award from EPSRC (GCRF_NF) based on the work undertaken in this grant. The academic partners in the DAC countries now have well established relationships with healthcare/tech companies for future work. |
Start Year | 2020 |
Description | DIDA mConsulting network |
Organisation | King's College London |
Country | United Kingdom |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | Intellectual input, training and capacity building of staff, mentorship, development of successful grant application (REaCH trial - EPSRC (GCRF_NF) funded), programme leadership, network development and facilitation, development of stage 2 grant application |
Collaborator Contribution | Academic partners provided intellectual input, training and capacity building of staff, mentorship, development of successful grant application (REaCH trial - EPSRC (GCRF_NF) funded), further development of training package, undertook pilot study of training package, development of stage 2 grant application Non academic collaborators provided information and intelligence regarding the current and future plans for remote healthcare provision (including policy, infrastructure, funding) in countries including: Tanzania, Uganda, Rwanda, Nigeria, Kenya |
Impact | The academic partners successfully secured an £819,596 award from EPSRC (GCRF_NF) based on the work undertaken in this grant. The academic partners in the DAC countries now have well established relationships with healthcare/tech companies for future work. |
Start Year | 2020 |
Description | DIDA mConsulting network |
Organisation | Makerere University |
Country | Uganda |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | Intellectual input, training and capacity building of staff, mentorship, development of successful grant application (REaCH trial - EPSRC (GCRF_NF) funded), programme leadership, network development and facilitation, development of stage 2 grant application |
Collaborator Contribution | Academic partners provided intellectual input, training and capacity building of staff, mentorship, development of successful grant application (REaCH trial - EPSRC (GCRF_NF) funded), further development of training package, undertook pilot study of training package, development of stage 2 grant application Non academic collaborators provided information and intelligence regarding the current and future plans for remote healthcare provision (including policy, infrastructure, funding) in countries including: Tanzania, Uganda, Rwanda, Nigeria, Kenya |
Impact | The academic partners successfully secured an £819,596 award from EPSRC (GCRF_NF) based on the work undertaken in this grant. The academic partners in the DAC countries now have well established relationships with healthcare/tech companies for future work. |
Start Year | 2020 |
Description | DIDA mConsulting network |
Organisation | Medical Concierge Group (TMCG) |
Country | Uganda |
Sector | Private |
PI Contribution | Intellectual input, training and capacity building of staff, mentorship, development of successful grant application (REaCH trial - EPSRC (GCRF_NF) funded), programme leadership, network development and facilitation, development of stage 2 grant application |
Collaborator Contribution | Academic partners provided intellectual input, training and capacity building of staff, mentorship, development of successful grant application (REaCH trial - EPSRC (GCRF_NF) funded), further development of training package, undertook pilot study of training package, development of stage 2 grant application Non academic collaborators provided information and intelligence regarding the current and future plans for remote healthcare provision (including policy, infrastructure, funding) in countries including: Tanzania, Uganda, Rwanda, Nigeria, Kenya |
Impact | The academic partners successfully secured an £819,596 award from EPSRC (GCRF_NF) based on the work undertaken in this grant. The academic partners in the DAC countries now have well established relationships with healthcare/tech companies for future work. |
Start Year | 2020 |
Description | DIDA mConsulting network |
Organisation | Mobihealth International Ltd |
Country | United Kingdom |
Sector | Private |
PI Contribution | Intellectual input, training and capacity building of staff, mentorship, development of successful grant application (REaCH trial - EPSRC (GCRF_NF) funded), programme leadership, network development and facilitation, development of stage 2 grant application |
Collaborator Contribution | Academic partners provided intellectual input, training and capacity building of staff, mentorship, development of successful grant application (REaCH trial - EPSRC (GCRF_NF) funded), further development of training package, undertook pilot study of training package, development of stage 2 grant application Non academic collaborators provided information and intelligence regarding the current and future plans for remote healthcare provision (including policy, infrastructure, funding) in countries including: Tanzania, Uganda, Rwanda, Nigeria, Kenya |
Impact | The academic partners successfully secured an £819,596 award from EPSRC (GCRF_NF) based on the work undertaken in this grant. The academic partners in the DAC countries now have well established relationships with healthcare/tech companies for future work. |
Start Year | 2020 |
Description | DIDA mConsulting network |
Organisation | St. Francis University College of Health and Allied Sciences |
Country | Tanzania, United Republic of |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | Intellectual input, training and capacity building of staff, mentorship, development of successful grant application (REaCH trial - EPSRC (GCRF_NF) funded), programme leadership, network development and facilitation, development of stage 2 grant application |
Collaborator Contribution | Academic partners provided intellectual input, training and capacity building of staff, mentorship, development of successful grant application (REaCH trial - EPSRC (GCRF_NF) funded), further development of training package, undertook pilot study of training package, development of stage 2 grant application Non academic collaborators provided information and intelligence regarding the current and future plans for remote healthcare provision (including policy, infrastructure, funding) in countries including: Tanzania, Uganda, Rwanda, Nigeria, Kenya |
Impact | The academic partners successfully secured an £819,596 award from EPSRC (GCRF_NF) based on the work undertaken in this grant. The academic partners in the DAC countries now have well established relationships with healthcare/tech companies for future work. |
Start Year | 2020 |
Description | DIDA mConsulting network |
Organisation | University of Birmingham |
Country | United Kingdom |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | Intellectual input, training and capacity building of staff, mentorship, development of successful grant application (REaCH trial - EPSRC (GCRF_NF) funded), programme leadership, network development and facilitation, development of stage 2 grant application |
Collaborator Contribution | Academic partners provided intellectual input, training and capacity building of staff, mentorship, development of successful grant application (REaCH trial - EPSRC (GCRF_NF) funded), further development of training package, undertook pilot study of training package, development of stage 2 grant application Non academic collaborators provided information and intelligence regarding the current and future plans for remote healthcare provision (including policy, infrastructure, funding) in countries including: Tanzania, Uganda, Rwanda, Nigeria, Kenya |
Impact | The academic partners successfully secured an £819,596 award from EPSRC (GCRF_NF) based on the work undertaken in this grant. The academic partners in the DAC countries now have well established relationships with healthcare/tech companies for future work. |
Start Year | 2020 |
Description | DIDA mConsulting network |
Organisation | University of Ibadan |
Country | Nigeria |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | Intellectual input, training and capacity building of staff, mentorship, development of successful grant application (REaCH trial - EPSRC (GCRF_NF) funded), programme leadership, network development and facilitation, development of stage 2 grant application |
Collaborator Contribution | Academic partners provided intellectual input, training and capacity building of staff, mentorship, development of successful grant application (REaCH trial - EPSRC (GCRF_NF) funded), further development of training package, undertook pilot study of training package, development of stage 2 grant application Non academic collaborators provided information and intelligence regarding the current and future plans for remote healthcare provision (including policy, infrastructure, funding) in countries including: Tanzania, Uganda, Rwanda, Nigeria, Kenya |
Impact | The academic partners successfully secured an £819,596 award from EPSRC (GCRF_NF) based on the work undertaken in this grant. The academic partners in the DAC countries now have well established relationships with healthcare/tech companies for future work. |
Start Year | 2020 |
Description | Health worker training for remote consulting: moving to self-directed learning |
Organisation | King's College London |
Country | United Kingdom |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | We developed training for health workers in Nigeria and Tanzania on how to deliver remote consulting in primary care. The training was online with facilitation. The training known as the REaCH training formed the basis for an intervention for a clinical trial. The collaboration used the REaCH training as basis for a new version REaCH2 which is shorter and completely self-directed. |
Collaborator Contribution | The partners provided education expertise, their time and KCL provided funding for researchers to undertake the review of the training to produce REaCH2 |
Impact | REaCH2 training for Nigeria and suitable for other West African countries REaCH2 training for Tanzania and suitable for other East African countries |
Start Year | 2021 |
Description | Health worker training for remote consulting: moving to self-directed learning |
Organisation | St. Francis University College of Health and Allied Sciences |
Country | Tanzania, United Republic of |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | We developed training for health workers in Nigeria and Tanzania on how to deliver remote consulting in primary care. The training was online with facilitation. The training known as the REaCH training formed the basis for an intervention for a clinical trial. The collaboration used the REaCH training as basis for a new version REaCH2 which is shorter and completely self-directed. |
Collaborator Contribution | The partners provided education expertise, their time and KCL provided funding for researchers to undertake the review of the training to produce REaCH2 |
Impact | REaCH2 training for Nigeria and suitable for other West African countries REaCH2 training for Tanzania and suitable for other East African countries |
Start Year | 2021 |
Description | Health worker training for remote consulting: moving to self-directed learning |
Organisation | University of Ibadan |
Country | Nigeria |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | We developed training for health workers in Nigeria and Tanzania on how to deliver remote consulting in primary care. The training was online with facilitation. The training known as the REaCH training formed the basis for an intervention for a clinical trial. The collaboration used the REaCH training as basis for a new version REaCH2 which is shorter and completely self-directed. |
Collaborator Contribution | The partners provided education expertise, their time and KCL provided funding for researchers to undertake the review of the training to produce REaCH2 |
Impact | REaCH2 training for Nigeria and suitable for other West African countries REaCH2 training for Tanzania and suitable for other East African countries |
Start Year | 2021 |
Title | Remote consulting for healthcare (ReaCH) training materials |
Description | A 14-hour training course which enables health workers to confidently deliver healthcare to their patients using their own smart phone and integrate this digital delivery with their existing health care system. The digitally delivered blended training uses train-the-trainer approach: nurses/medical officers/doctors are trained via their smart phones using an app and social media; other cadres of health worker including community health workers are trained using their feature phones and available social media. The training materials are available free for non-profit users at: https://warwick.ac.uk/fac/sci/med/about/centres/wcfgh/research/remoteconsulting/ . July 2021 they were accredited by the Medical Council of Tanganika and available through the Tanzanian National E-Learning platform. |
Type | Support Tool - For Medical Intervention |
Current Stage Of Development | Early clinical assessment |
Year Development Stage Completed | 2020 |
Development Status | Under active development/distribution |
Impact | The training material is still under development and assessment |
URL | https://warwick.ac.uk/fac/sci/med/research/hscience/sssh/research/lyncs/covid19/ |
Description | Community engagements - Ulanga District, Tanzania |
Form Of Engagement Activity | Participation in an activity, workshop or similar |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | Regional |
Primary Audience | Professional Practitioners |
Results and Impact | Multiple engagements with community leaders, healthcare workers (facility-based), district managers and providers of remote consulting services/telecommunications in Ulanga district, Morogoro Region to explore the health needs and access issues facing the community and healthcare workers and the use of remote consulting through the REaCH training delivered to healthcare workers in the District. |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2020,2021 |
Description | Community engagements - remote rural districts, Uganda |
Form Of Engagement Activity | Participation in an activity, workshop or similar |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | Regional |
Primary Audience | Other audiences |
Results and Impact | Engagements with 23 district health managers, healthcare workers, community leaders, local village councils and faith leaders in remote rural areas ( Nakasongola, Luwero, Nakaseke, Moroto and Yumbe Districts, including the Bidi Bidi refugee settlement) to explore healthcare needs and access issues, availability and use of remote consulting, including connectivity. |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2020 |
Description | Community engagements - rural Oyo State, Nigeria |
Form Of Engagement Activity | Participation in an activity, workshop or similar |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | Regional |
Primary Audience | Other audiences |
Results and Impact | Engagements with 12 community leaders/representatives, healthcare workers and local decision makers in 6 rural communities of Oyo State (Ijaye, Mele, Onidundu, Akufo, Odebode and Ilaji) to explore healthcare and access issues and the availability and use of remote consulting services, including network coverage. |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2020,2021 |
Description | Community engagements - rural sub-counties, Kenya |
Form Of Engagement Activity | Participation in an activity, workshop or similar |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | Regional |
Primary Audience | Other audiences |
Results and Impact | Engagements with 15 community leaders/representatives, healthcare workers and local decision makers (including county and sub-county health officers) in 7 rural sub-counties in West Kenya to explore healthcare and access issues and the availability and use of remote consulting services, including network coverage. |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2020,2021 |
Description | Dialogue with the Alan Turing Data Ethics Special Interest Group |
Form Of Engagement Activity | A talk or presentation |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | National |
Primary Audience | Other audiences |
Results and Impact | The dialogue raised ethical questions about the promotion of digital health initiatives involving data collection and AI in sub-Saharan Africa. There was discussion of the issues. |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2023 |
Description | Engagement with Training Directorate, Ministry of Health, Tanzania |
Form Of Engagement Activity | Participation in an activity, workshop or similar |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | National |
Primary Audience | Policymakers/politicians |
Results and Impact | Discussion with the Director, Directorate of Training in Ministry of Health, Community Development, Gender, Elderly and Children (MoHCDEC) about the REaCH training programme. The team has been invited to make a formal presentation to the Directorate (pending lifting of COVID-19 restrictions). |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2020 |
Description | Global Health Webinar on improving health in slums |
Form Of Engagement Activity | A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | International |
Primary Audience | Policymakers/politicians |
Results and Impact | Webinar hosted by African Population and Health Research Centre delivery results of research attracted audience of policy makers and practitioners concerned with provision of healthcare within urban slums of Kenya. The use of mobile consulting within urban slums was one of the topics considered, based on results of our research. |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2021 |
URL | https://drive.google.com/file/d/1iHmLCiP3YrGfnyE0KM-DVOTAmNAhPHT-/view |
Description | Participation in technical working committee, Ministry of Health, Uganda (co-applicant) |
Form Of Engagement Activity | A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | National |
Primary Audience | Policymakers/politicians |
Results and Impact | Co-applicant Vincent Kiberu, participate as a member of (1) the Health Information, Innovation and Research Technical Working Committee and (2) of the technical subcommittee charged with review and assessment of various health information systems and applications, Ministry of Health |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2020,2021 |
Description | Policy brief |
Form Of Engagement Activity | A magazine, newsletter or online publication |
Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
Geographic Reach | International |
Primary Audience | Policymakers/politicians |
Results and Impact | Policy brief issued in Kenya by African Population and Health Research Centre (APHRC) on "Mobile health consulting and as an option for improved access to healthcare in Nairobi's slums". This was one of the regular policy briefs issued by APHRC to their extensive network of policy makers. |
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2022 |
URL | https://aphrc.org/publication/covid19-and-community-healthcare-mobile-health-consulting-as-an-option... |