30. The adoption of mobile phones has occurred at perhaps the fastest rate and to the deepest level of any consumer‐level technology in history Consider Adoption - http://www.mit.edu/~tavneet/M-PESA.pdf African Cell Phone Owners Growth- ITU
39. In April 2009 an HIV results for an infant at Nameembo Rural Health Clinic took 66 days to get to the infant, from collection to delivery. In February 2011 the same type of infant HIV result at Nameembo Rural Health Clinic took only 16 days to get to the infant, from collection to delivery.
57. Amal (‘ hope ’ ) School for the Deaf, Khartoum, September 2011
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Editor's Notes
We need to do tech4dev better. Here’s how: hire local brains, build global networks, gather people together and let them do their work
Did you know that nutrition is an underlying cause of 50% of all child deaths? Children from poorer households are 4 times as likely to be underweight (MUAC – middle upper arm circumference band)
If HIV+ child is not put on treatment by their first birthday, their chance of dying goes up by 30%. In rural areas many children never find out if they are HIV+
84% of the population lives without a safe drinking water source in rural areas, this is only 16% in urban areas.
Children in the poorest households and children in rural areas are less likely to attend primary school
Children from the richest households are twice as likely to be registered as children from the poorest households. Without an identity, children have much more difficulty in accessing essential services and are much more vulnerable to exploitation.
In 2010, UNICEF responded to 290 humanitarian situations in 98 countries (half the nations of the world) (clock:10m)
The Failure
This is a digital doorway - a low power consuming, open source based computer with three computing stations. It is weather proof and virtually unbreakable. These are children working and learning on the digital doorway.
This is a digital doorway - a low power consuming, open source based computer with three computing stations. It is weather proof and virtually unbreakable. These are children working and learning on the digital doorway. http://www.digitaldoorway.org.za/index_main.php?do=sites
First set of sketches of a portable Digital Doorway
The Bee was designed to provide access to information and education in emergency situations
UNICEF convened top thinkers in ruggedized computing and education for two days in NYHQ to come up with specs and plans for the first prototype, which Seth built in his basement.
Similarly a course called Design For UNICEF, taught at NYU ’s Graduate ITP program, brings together skilled graduate students and UNICEF experts. This year one of the designs that came out of the discussion was the Water Canary.
Nothing is more important than working in the field. The Bee was taken back to the environment where the DD had been tested and used for years. And further development was done there (SA)
Clock:17m
66% of africa ’s population is now reached by mobile phone signal
BUT voice and text only. no smart phones and data is too expensive
To give you some context of the structure and resources at people ’ s disposal - District capitals will often have a hospital in the largest town (often serving millions of people). These hospitals have a couple of doctors, nurses and trained health professionals and will have electricity most of the time. Malawi 4 central hospitals (each serving 2.5 million people)
600 health centers - run by Catholic services as often the govt can ’ t even support them - serving 10,000 1 medical assistant, 2 nurses, 30 HSAs working within the community
Most staff are Community Health Workers, given maybe a few weeks training and volunteering. Often cut off from formal health system. Thus there is high turnover. Because of the lack of trained health workers - task shifting
this is where chw ’ s work - in the community
more and more we are seeing that this is how they communicate (23m)
This is the CHW – torn between worlds - we’ve been looking at tools that can help them do their job better
This is the type of tool they have, for us to use
And this is a sytem - this is using technology to make faster paper
Realtime success for the health worker
Realtime information at a government level (30 min)
- we write the software with direct input from the people who will use it - we write small amounts of software and test with users frequently - we modify any original plans based on testing
- we consult with all stakeholders and explain intentions - we update all interested parties frequently - all software and documentation is open source and publically accessible
- we carefully document our work and processes - both on the project management and software side - and make it a public good - we adopt all best practices from previous implementations as to not repeat mistakes - we reuse software
- to build local capacity, we hire local software developers to co-create the software - we keep these software developers on staff to insure changes can be made to it once the initial deployment period has passed - we involve government directly in the development of solutions - we keep hardware and external inputs to a minimum
- all solutions are developed and designed to scale - all projects include materials that allow ministries and partners to modify, duplicate, and extend at their discretion
1 in UI/UX/Dev/PM/hacking/thinking/breaking/designing 2. “open source programmers in kitgum? Why?
but not feral ones … two ways we can go about attacking this need – 1 souktel stuff 2 labs