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Connecting for Health Research in Africa International Workshop on African Research & Networking Dr Joan Dzenowagis World Health Organization CERN, Geneva, September 2005 Outline I. World Health Organization's African Region II. Information & communication technologies (ICT) for health programs III. ICT in support of WHO programs World Health Organization September 2005 2 World Health Organization • Specialized agency of the United Nations • Public health mandate, founded 1948 • 6000 staff: headquarters (Geneva), regional offices and 192 countries • Major initiatives for combating infectious diseases (HIV/AIDS, TB, malaria, influenza, polio); improving maternal and child health; tobacco control, others World Health Organization September 2005 3 Example: Causes of death WHO African Region, stratum E 7% 20% 34% Communicable diseases (including maternal causes) HIV, TB, malaria Noncommunicable conditions Injuries 39% World Health Organization September 2005 Source: World health report, 2004 4 Effects of globalization: Epidemics affect travel and trade World Health Organization September 2005 Source: WHO 2005 5 ICT is fundamental in health research • Improve flow of information and increase research and operational efficiency • Quality and safety: avoid mistakes, reduce costs and duplication • Access to tools for learning, research and practice • Access to information, data, products, advice World Health Organization September 2005 6 Model of ICT in health systems Individual users Pervasiveness Organizational infrastructure Geographic dispersion World Health Organization September 2005 Organizational users Characteristics of use Sectoral absorption Internet services Telecommunications Connectivity infrastructure 7 Spending on health, ICT and education, Kenya (% GDP, 2002) 10 GDP: 12 224 740 000 Public Private Total 7.5 % GDP 5 2.5 0 World Health Organization September 2005 Health ICT Education Sources: WHO 2005, ITU 2004, UNDP 2004 8 Making ICT work for health: Health InterNetwork One of four major initiatives of the UN Millennium Action Plan, Sept 2000 Supports public health programs and priorities • • • • Content: relevant, high quality, affordable Connectivity: improving Internet access Capacity: training to use information effectively Policy: creating a facilitating environment World Health Organization September 2005 9 HIN Access to Research Initiative • First HIN success: major breakthrough in making content available • Partnership between WHO and journal publishers • Delivers 2900+ biomedical journals online, free or at low cost, to health institutions in 113 lowincome countries • Addition of agriculture (FAO) & environment (UNEP) to partnership, collections World Health Organization September 2005 10 UNDP/World Bank/WHO Special Programme for Research & Training in Tropical Diseases (TDR) • Jointly managed funding agency, supported by voluntary contributions • 2 goals: building research capacity and developing new tools for disease control • Focuses on 10 tropical diseases World Health Organization September 2005 11 TDR's strategic use of ICT Since the 1990s has incorporated eMail, Internet into program and outreach • • • • • SatelLife launch and support: 1992-95 Hardware installations: 1993-98 Connectivity solutions: 1998-2000 LAN installations: 1998-2000 Training courses & materials for HINARI institutions World Health Organization September 2005 12 Supporting WHO's work in countries: WHO Global Private Network (1) • Began in 1999 with 6 regional offices • Adding country offices and health centers (approx 150) • Connectivity with satellite (Norway) and terrestrial links (Geneva hub) • WHO offices in Africa mainly connected via satellite, with some VPN connections via ISP World Health Organization September 2005 13 40 offices connected Target: all countries by early 2006 World Health Organization September 2005 14 WHO Global Private Network (2) • Services include voice, video conferencing, Internet and data • Firewalls at hubs & local offices • Bandwidth 1Mbps for regional office, 128/192 Kbps for country offices • GPN crucial for integrated WHO global management & services at country level World Health Organization September 2005 15 WHO Global Private Network (3) • Part of the CERN consortium for Internet access • WHO has started using the network of scientists (Sinet, Geant) to connect offices • Seek to collaborate more closely with other networks, to benefit in the future World Health Organization September 2005 16 Joan Dzenowagis [email protected] With thanks to WHO colleagues G. Kernen, D. Metais, S. Wayling