Professor Richard Adanu, Dean of the School of Public Health of the
University of Ghana, has said the application of Information
Communication Technology (ICT) to the healthcare industry would help
address universal healthcare challenges.
Speaking on the theme of the 67th Annual New Year School: “Promoting
Universal Health for a sustainable development in Ghana: Is ICT the Game
Changer”, he said ICT could facilitate universal healthcare in Ghana if
it targeted the decision makers in families and households.
Prof Adanu, who gave the keynote address at the opening of the 67th New
Year School, said it would be better if the application of ICT was
targeted at people in households who actually made the decisions on
whether or not a particular ailment required medical attention.
He said Ghana’s healthcare system faced challenges as it still relied
heavily on paper based medical records, it was centred around health
workers and it has weak data capture and storage systems.
He said given the improvements in technological advancements such as
proliferation of mobile phones and smartphones, increased internet
coverage and the growing use of laptops and tablets by young people, ICT
could address those challenges.
Prof. Adanu said there is a need for effective knowledge sharing in
order to achieve universal health coverage adding that this could be
done via voice and text SMS, interactive training materials, cell phone
linkages between frontline medical people especially in rural areas and
specialists in the cities.
Such platforms could be used for appointments scheduling to avoid queues
at the hospitals, call centers, referral systems and smart interactive
web pages to give advice and medical information to patients, he added.
Mr Alex Segbefia, Minister of Health, who opened the five-day school and
conference, said effective use of ICT products in healthcare could help
to make diagnosis easier and more accurate, thus saving large amounts
of money that went into treatments such as in the case of malaria.
He said in order for Ghana and Africa to achieve the Sustainable
Development Goals, it would have to employ ICT since there had been
phenomenal advancements in technology in general and health technology
in particular over the last decades.
The Minister said for universal healthcare coverage to be achieved and
sustained there was the need to develop and sustain community health
services since that was the core basic level.
Mrs Lucy Quist, Managing Director of Airtel Ghana, who sponsored the
programme, drew the school’s attention to possible uses of ICT that
could impact lives using real life examples and called on participants
to articulate ideas that would to harness the transformational power of
ICT in healthcare.
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