Coded in Country

Lessons from m-Health Projects: The Tech is the Easy Part

Posted by AnneryanHeatwole on Mar 08, 2011

Adherence reminders, patient data transmission via community health workers, HIV/AIDs info services – mobile phones can be used in a variety of health settings. As mobiles have become cheaper and more easily available around the world, mobile health projects have followed, taking advantage of the devices’ data storage capabilities, information transferring potential, and social networking features.

MobileActive has covered the m-health area extensively as NGOs, aid organizations, and governments continue to launch new projects incorporating ICTs into their work. Organizations like the Praekelt Foundation, which runs multiple mobile health projects, Pesinet, a micro-insurance and community health worker data collection tool, Dimagi, which developed CommCare (a project that helps community health workers promote healthy behaviors in patients), and MoTeCH, a Grameen Foundation project that uses mobiles to send medical advice to pregnant women and young parents along with creating a data managing resource for community health workers, are exploring the potential that mobile technology offers for delivering health care.

Looking at some of these organizations’ experiences, we put together a list of key lessons organizations are learning as they develop m-health projects:

Beware the Foreign Expert; Or Why Coded In Country and Local Tech Capacity is the Way to Go

Posted by nlesh on Jul 13, 2010

This guest post is written by Neal Lesh of D-Tree International, and was originally published on the Open Mobile Consortium blog.  MobileActive.org is a founding member of the Open Mobile Consortium. The article is reposted here with Neal's permission.

As fair warning, this post is part rant, part confession, part promotion (see links below!), and part call to action for increased investment in local innovation in low- and middle-income countries.

I spend a good deal of my time raising money, working on budgets, and generally championing open source software designed to be used by health workers in low-income countries.   Most of this ‘eHealth’ software ends up being developed by extremely talented and dedicated software developers from the United States and other wealthy countries. I spend a relatively small portion of my time trying support and strengthen local software development capacity. 

For example, we’re working with a small, all Tanzanian innovation company called ITIDO.  While equally talented and motivated, ITIDO’s staff has less training and, consequently, less expertise than those of the organizations I’m affiliated with. However, it’s hard to shake the feeling that in the long run, Tanzania needs successful ITIDOs more than it needs organizations I’ve helped create.  It seems that a well-functioning ITIDO is more likely to build lasting, relevant, solutions that will actually be used in Tanzania.  

A key challenge is time. We often feel the need to deliver results in a few months.  And, indeed, there is no time to waste in developing and deploying technologies that have the potential to improve desperately needed healthcare.  Given limited funds and the need to deliver quickly, the most efficient approach is almost always to go with highly experienced software developers.  And this becomes more and more true once you start building software with one group of experts.  The people who know the current software best are the ones who can most quickly extend it.  Capacity building takes time.

One approach we advocate is establishing a “Coded in Country” (CIC) label for software, akin to a Fair Trade label for projects. There is ongoing discussion about the best definition of CIC, and if there should be an official certification process, but the original idea was that a software application or module is CIC if at least half of the money goes into local development. CIC nodes will provide capacity strengthening and opportunities for international exposure to talented local developers. The idea has generated a good deal of enthusiasm from many groups, especially those deploying eHealth software for use in Sub-Saharan countries in Africa. 

CIC and other related topics will be discussed during an online panel hosted by GHDonline on the topic of local development of global eHealth software from July 19-30 (sign up now!)