Goodness Apple

Text messages save pregnant Rwandan women

Posted in Science 'n' Technology, Social by goodnessapple on June 1, 2010

A man scrolls through his mobile phone to carry out a money transaction in Nairobi May 12, 2009. REUTERS/Noor Khamis

A man scrolls through his mobile phone to carry out a money transaction in Nairobi May 12, 2009.

Credit: Reuters/Noor Khamis


(Reuters) – At midnight Valentine Uwingabire’s back began to hurt. Her husband ran to tell Germaine Uwera, a community health worker in their village in the fertile foothills of Rwanda’s Volcanoes National Park.

Equipped with a mobile phone from the local health center, Uwera sent an urgent SMS text message and within a quarter of an hour, an ambulance had whisked Valentine to hospital. Minutes later Uwingabire’s third child was born.

“We called our child Manirakoze, which means ‘Thank God’,” she told reporters, sitting outside her mud and bamboo house pitched in the shadow of Karisimbi volcano, home to some of the world’s few remaining highland mountain gorillas.

Had it not been for Rwanda’s new Rapid SMS service, Valentine would have been carried in agony, down the hill to the nearest town on an improvised stretcher.

As is the case in much of Africa, fixed-line telephone networks are virtually non-existent outside of the capital and major cities.

The Rapid SMS scheme — a joint initiative between three U.N. organizations — is being tested in the Musanze District where 432 health workers have received mobile phones.

Health workers register pregnant women in their village via free SMS text messages and send regular updates to a central server in the capital, Kigali. They are monitored during the pregnancy, and those at high risk brought in for check-ups.

Rwanda, Africa’s most densely populated nation, is ranked among the world’s worst for maternal mortality, according to U.N. data, and it is an important target for the global body’s goal to reduce maternal deaths by 75 percent globally by 2015.

“NO MATERNAL DEATHS”

John Kalach, director of the nearest hospital in Ruhengeri, says since Rapid SMS launched in August 2009, his hospital has had no maternal deaths, compared to 10 the previous year.

“We used to get ladies coming here with serious complications just because they delayed the decision because the journey was very long,” he says.

Kalach says authorities can use the data to work out which diseases affect women during pregnancy, the causes of death for children below five years, the volume and type of drugs required, and to monitor population growth rates.

Friday Nwaigwe, UNICEF’s country head of child health and nutrition, says the next step is to give mobile phones to 17,500 maternal health workers across the country and eventually to all 50,000 community health workers.

“In Rwanda we have 750 out of every 100,000 pregnant women die every year. It’s a very big problem,” Nwaigwe says.

Still, in a nation where only six percent of its 10 million-strong population has access to electricity, a country-wide expansion of the scheme may run into problems.

Germaine says to charge her phone she has to walk 20 minutes to the nearest charging booth, and Kalach says some remote areas of the hilly country do not yet have network coverage.

But surrounded by trees heaving with chandeliers of green bananas and fields bursting with beans, Uwera and Uwingabire agree a simple text message has had a big impact on their lives.

“We used to use a traditional ambulance made of mats, like a stretcher made of papyrus and sticks. It takes one hour by walking — or five minutes in a car,” Germaine says, cradling baby Manirakoze and proudly brandishing her mobile telephone.

Reference Link
http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE64R2CL20100528?feedType=nl&feedName=ushealth1100

Courtesy
Thomson Reuters

Text messages save pregnant Rwandan women

Posted in Healthcare, Science 'n' Technology by goodnessapple on May 28, 2010

// // // // // // //

A man scrolls through his mobile phone to carry out a money transaction in Nairobi May 12, 2009. REUTERS/Noor Khamis

A man scrolls through his mobile phone to carry out a money transaction in Nairobi May 12, 2009.

Credit: Reuters/Noor Khamis

(Reuters) – At midnight Valentine Uwingabire’s back began to hurt. Her husband ran to tell Germaine Uwera, a community health worker in their village in the fertile foothills of Rwanda’s Volcanoes National Park.

Equipped with a mobile phone from the local health center, Uwera sent an urgent SMS text message and within a quarter of an hour, an ambulance had whisked Valentine to hospital. Minutes later Uwingabire’s third child was born.

“We called our child Manirakoze, which means ‘Thank God’,” she told reporters, sitting outside her mud and bamboo house pitched in the shadow of Karisimbi volcano, home to some of the world’s few remaining highland mountain gorillas.

Had it not been for Rwanda’s new Rapid SMS service, Valentine would have been carried in agony, down the hill to the nearest town on an improvised stretcher.

As is the case in much of Africa, fixed-line telephone networks are virtually non-existent outside of the capital and major cities.

The Rapid SMS scheme — a joint initiative between three U.N. organizations — is being tested in the Musanze District where 432 health workers have received mobile phones.

Health workers register pregnant women in their village via free SMS text messages and send regular updates to a central server in the capital, Kigali. They are monitored during the pregnancy, and those at high risk brought in for check-ups.

Rwanda, Africa’s most densely populated nation, is ranked among the world’s worst for maternal mortality, according to U.N. data, and it is an important target for the global body’s goal to reduce maternal deaths by 75 percent globally by 2015.

“NO MATERNAL DEATHS”

John Kalach, director of the nearest hospital in Ruhengeri, says since Rapid SMS launched in August 2009, his hospital has had no maternal deaths, compared to 10 the previous year.

“We used to get ladies coming here with serious complications just because they delayed the decision because the journey was very long,” he says.

Kalach says authorities can use the data to work out which diseases affect women during pregnancy, the causes of death for children below five years, the volume and type of drugs required, and to monitor population growth rates.

Friday Nwaigwe, UNICEF’s country head of child health and nutrition, says the next step is to give mobile phones to 17,500 maternal health workers across the country and eventually to all 50,000 community health workers.

“In Rwanda we have 750 out of every 100,000 pregnant women die every year. It’s a very big problem,” Nwaigwe says.

Still, in a nation where only six percent of its 10 million-strong population has access to electricity, a country-wide expansion of the scheme may run into problems.

Germaine says to charge her phone she has to walk 20 minutes to the nearest charging booth, and Kalach says some remote areas of the hilly country do not yet have network coverage.

But surrounded by trees heaving with chandeliers of green bananas and fields bursting with beans, Uwera and Uwingabire agree a simple text message has had a big impact on their lives.

“We used to use a traditional ambulance made of mats, like a stretcher made of papyrus and sticks. It takes one hour by walking — or five minutes in a car,” Germaine says, cradling baby Manirakoze and proudly brandishing her mobile telephone.

(Editing by Jeremy Clarke and Michael Roddy)

Reference Link
http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE64R2CL20100528?feedType=nl&feedName=ushealth1100

Courtesy
Thomson Reuters

Police to launch SMS alert

Posted in Enterprising by goodnessapple on March 4, 2010

Those in distress can send SMS to 94979 00000


Information on criminal activities can be sent

Home Minister to inaugurate facility today


Thiruvananthapuram, India: Mobile telephone users in the State can seek police help by sending distress messages as ‘SMS’ to the telephone number 94979 00000 from Thursday evening.

Inspector-General of Police Tomin. J. Thachankery said citizens should not use the facility to raise complaints about civic issues.

The service is chiefly intended to benefit those facing an immediate threat to their life or property. Citizens witnessing road accidents, crime, hit-and-run accidents, anti-social and terror-related activities, suspiciously abandoned bags and other containers can alert the police by sending an SMS to the number. The State Police SMS Message Centre at the Police Headquarters complex here can, if needed, relay the information from the public to as many as 15,250 mobile phones issued to police officials on law and order duty in the State.

It can also restrict the information to relevant groups. The National Informatics Centre has developed the software for the SMS Alert programme. Bharathiya Sanchar Nigam Ltd. is the service provider.

The public can use the facility to report specific instances in which the police have not acted satisfactorily on their complaints. Home Minister Kodiyeri Balakrishnan will inaugurate the new facility on Thursday.

Reference Link
http://www.hindu.com/2010/03/04/stories/2010030463710300.htm

Courtesy
The Hindu