Rinke de Wit Tobias F, Janssens Wendy, Antwi Maxwell, Milimo Emmanuel, Mutegi Nick, Marwa Heri, Ndili Njide, Owino Wasunna, Waiyaiya Emma, Garcia Rojas Diana C, Dolfing Monique, de Graaff Aafke, Swanepoel Ruan, van der Graaf Mark H, Mulder Dorien, De Sanctis Teresa, Kratule Santa, Koyuncu Cem, Rogo Khama, Gómez-Pérez Gloria P, Spieker Nicole
PharmAccess Foundation, Amsterdam, Netherlands.
Amsterdam Institute for Global Health and Development (AIGHD), Amsterdam, Netherlands.
Front Health Serv. 2022 Nov 28;2:987828. doi: 10.3389/frhs.2022.987828. eCollection 2022.
The COVID-19 pandemic has painfully exposed the constraints of fragile health systems in low- and middle-income countries, where global containment measures largely set by high-income countries resulted in disproportionate collateral damage. In Africa, a shift is urgently needed from emergency response to structural health systems strengthening efforts, which requires coordinated interventions to increase access, efficiency, quality, transparency, equity, and flexibility of health services. We postulate that rapid digitalization of health interventions is a key way forward to increase resilience of African health systems to epidemic challenges. In this paper we describe how PharmAccess' ongoing digital health system interventions in Africa were rapidly customized to respond to COVID-19. We describe how we developed: a COVID-19 App for healthcare providers used by more than 1,000 healthcare facilities in 15 African countries from May-November 2020; digital loans to support private healthcare providers with USD 20 million disbursed to healthcare facilities impacted by COVID-19 in Kenya; a customized Dutch mobile COVID-19 triage App with 4,500 users in Ghana; digital diaries to track COVID-19 impacts on household expenditures and healthcare utilization; a public-private partnership for real-time assessment of COVID-19 diagnostics in West-Kenya; and an expanded mobile phone-based maternal and child-care bundle to include COVID-19 adapted services. We also discuss the challenges we faced, the lessons learned, the impact of these interventions on the local healthcare system, and the implications of our findings for policy-making. Digital interventions bring efficiency due to their flexibility and timeliness, allowing co-creation, targeting, and rapid policy decisions through bottom-up approaches. COVID-19 digital innovations allowed for cross-pollinating the interests of patients, providers, payers, and policy-makers in challenging times, showing how such approaches can pave the way to universal health coverage and resilient healthcare systems in Africa.
新冠疫情惨痛地暴露了低收入和中等收入国家脆弱卫生系统的局限性,在这些国家,主要由高收入国家制定的全球防控措施造成了不成比例的附带损害。在非洲,迫切需要从应急响应转向加强卫生系统结构的努力,这需要采取协调一致的干预措施,以提高卫生服务的可及性、效率、质量、透明度、公平性和灵活性。我们推测,卫生干预措施的快速数字化是增强非洲卫生系统应对疫情挑战能力的关键前进方向。在本文中,我们描述了PharmAccess正在非洲开展的数字卫生系统干预措施是如何迅速进行调整以应对新冠疫情的。我们介绍了我们如何开发:一款供医疗服务提供者使用的新冠应用程序,2020年5月至11月期间,15个非洲国家的1000多家医疗机构使用了该程序;数字贷款,向肯尼亚受新冠疫情影响的医疗机构发放了2000万美元,以支持私立医疗服务提供者;一款为加纳定制的荷兰移动新冠分诊应用程序,有4500名用户;数字日记,用于跟踪新冠疫情对家庭支出和医疗服务利用的影响;在肯尼亚西部建立公私伙伴关系,对新冠诊断进行实时评估;以及扩大基于手机的母婴护理套餐,将适应新冠疫情的服务纳入其中。我们还讨论了我们面临的挑战、吸取的教训、这些干预措施对当地医疗系统的影响,以及我们的研究结果对政策制定的启示。数字干预措施因其灵活性和及时性而提高了效率,通过自下而上的方法实现共同创造、精准定位和快速政策决策。新冠疫情数字创新在艰难时期促进了患者、提供者、支付方和政策制定者之间的利益交叉融合,展示了此类方法如何为非洲实现全民健康覆盖和有韧性的医疗系统铺平道路。