How PDAs Are Saving Lives In Africa 53
Mark Goldberg writes "UN Dispatch, the United Nations affairs blog I write, just posted an item that may interest this community. Joel Selanikio, a medical doctor and technologist, writes to us from Zambia to relay how PDA devices are quietly revolutionizing public health services in sub-Saharan Africa. Selanikio runs a non-profit called DataDyne.org that trains local health officials to use PDAs equipped with an open source software tool to track outbreaks, coordinate vaccination efforts, and perform other vital public health tasks. So far, says Selanikio, the pilot program in Zambia has been a resounding success.
Unfortunate naming (Score:3, Interesting)
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Re:Unfortunate naming (Score:5, Funny)
Sincerely,
The Umbrella Corporation
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Fantastic (Score:5, Interesting)
This solution seems a bit more elegant with PDAs. Has anyone else worked on a project like this?
PDA application (Score:3, Informative)
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The data quality was spotty and the teenagers were pretty hard on the equipment but h
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We send billions of $ to the peoples of Africa, and some to the governments in which we have either befriended or threatened with being "blowd up". I havent heard much of Kadafi recently.. Wonder why.
And frankly, we need the peoples of Africa to unite and overthrow the governments we dont like. So, we help the peoples.
And lastly... diseases dont just stay in one place.
Where is it coming from. (Score:1, Interesting)
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ICT4D, handheld solutions (Score:5, Informative)
I don't like pointing out problems without solutions. It might be a good idea to replicate the functionality of the PDAs as far as possible in paper, and then to have bulk entry facilities in Sahana. I know that PDAs are the optimal solution in terms of using technology the way it was supposed to, but situational realities can dictate otherwise.
I think it's dangerous to assume that the people who will be in control of the conduits through which the system acquires information are sophisticated to the extent that they can successfully handle a PDA, yet it is good design to have facilities for people who can.
And since we're looking at F/LOSS ICT4D projects, I can think of no more worthy a project than Mifos [mifos.org] (disclaimer, I was involved in this project): a shared open source microfinance platform in Java. Worth a look if you're a Java coder and would like to pitch in!
Re:ICT4D, handheld solutions (Score:4, Informative)
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Re:ICT4D, handheld solutions (Score:5, Informative)
I'm the developer of EpiSurveyor. While we've had excellent results in the field with PDAs for almost ten years now, working with the American Red Cross, UNICEF, WHO, and many other organizations, we're now shifting from PDAs (ie, unconnected pocket computers) to cell phones (ie, connected pocket computers). Cell phones, as you may know, are rapidly spreading across the developing world: just about every health worker we come across already has one. I believe that before the end of the year we'll have a version of EpiSurveyor that runs on J2ME platforms. Keep an eye out for updates at www.datadyne.org
Best,
Joel Selanikio
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High-end iPaqs aren't cheap... You could put together a low-end PDA for $30, and it would have more than enough power to handle data entry, networking, etc. I still use my B&W 26MHz Psion5mx, and haven't felt the need to get anything higher-end. The dirt cheap "Osaris" works equally well.
I'd be more worried about the durability of paper than a PDA.
There goes my name! (Score:2)
On a lower-tech plane... (Score:2)
Unpossible!! (Score:2)
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OK, here it is (Score:4, Insightful)
Until Africa stabilizes itself politically, improving public health feels good and makes everyone look humanitarian, but it really just creates a much larger problem involving overpopulation and ecological disaster.
I read this again just the other day in the Times -- all the feel-good Western "help" programs that "improve" the lives of Africans have largely just increased the population to the extent that there is no longer farmland that can be meaningfully subdivided in Africa, forcing people into urban areas where they live in poverty and join in whatever military coup that comes down the pike (free drugs, an AK-47 and a chance to kill your rivals).
And this is when the programs *work* -- when they don't work, all we end up doing is lining the pockets of thugs like Robert Mugabe, Daniel Arap Moi, and enabling proto-thugs like Thabo "AIDS is a conspiracy, take this folk remedy" Mbeki.
Repeat After Me: Westerns Cannot Save Africans. Only Africans can Save Africans. When Africans have a stable political system they can (easily!) solve many of these basic problems like clean water, healthcare, etc. Until then, "solving" these problems by Africans means dying by machete/mortar/7.62x39 round in political infighting instead of malaria.
And while I'm on my soap box, where are all the Westerners (generally leftists) who were so behind all the African "freedom fighters" in the 1960s and 70s? Shouldn't they be accepting some of the blame for putting into power some of these unbelievably corrupt African regimes?
(Thanks, I'll gladly repost for the next Western-geek-tech-saves-Africa article).
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Just today the Times had an article about Zimbabwe's largest baker running out flour because there's no foreign reserves to buy it -- Zimbabwe used to be a net exporter of food before Mugabe's disastrous
History repeats... (Score:5, Insightful)
This story seems to me to be another page from the same book; the more information the community has about itself, and can share with others, the better the quality of life for the community. With so much horror in Africa these days, it's heartening to hear a good news story.
OLPC (Score:2)
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OK pal, what's your angle? (Score:2, Funny)
Wouldn't it be the opposite? (Score:1)
tangentally related here... (Score:2)
Heh, heh. (Score:2)
Snicker.
The reality of the situation (Score:1)
I currently work in Banda Aceh, Indonesia and have an Indonesian friend is working for the UN. He works on a similar project where he is collecting data from villages using a smart phone. However he doesn't actually enter it directly into a smart phone - he writes the information down on paper because it is easier and faster and then goes to the local coffee shop to enter it into smart phone. From personal experience I know that it's not that easy to quickly enter information into a PDA/smart phone.
This ma
Needs AfricanPotato v2.1 (Score:1)