UN, Vodafone and Rockefeller launch mHealth Alliance

  • 24 February 2009

The Rockefeller Foundation, the United Nations Foundation and The Vodafone Foundation – three of the leading foundations involved in global health, technology and humanitarian assistance – have banded together to create the Mobile Health Alliance.

The new mHealth Alliance will work to maximise the impact of mobile health, especially in the developing world.

Terry Kramer, Vodafone Foundation Trustee said: "I believe it is critical for us to harness the benefits that mobile technology can bring to global healthcare, in both sociological and economic terms."

He continued: "When you consider that there are 2.2 billion mobile phones in the developing world, 305 million computers but only 11 million hospital beds you can instantly see how mobiles can create effective solutions to address healthcare challenges.”

The formation of the Alliance resulted from a July 2008 Rockefeller Foundation-hosted conference on the future of mHealth, in which participants identified the need to increase collaboration in cross-sectoral and pan-regional partnerships to improve healthcare delivery in the developing world.

Participants included representatives of Cisco, Google, Microsoft, Nokia, and Qualcomm, as well as the Earth Institute, MIT and the UN World.

“Mobile technology can enable significant progress toward reaching the UN Millennium Development Goals relating to health. This mHealth Alliance will provide a platform to bring the technology and health sectors together to maximize the impact mobile technology can have in improving health across the developing world, “said Daniel Carucci, Vice President for Global Health at the United Nations Foundation, which operates a £15m partnership with The Vodafone Foundation using mobile technology to advance UN humanitarian work.

The mHealth Alliance will encourage the development of scalable, sustainable and open standard health solutions that can be made widely available through creating partnerships that strengthen the potential of mobile technology. It will also support project implementation and commission research on the opportunities for mHealth.

A new report, mHealth for Development: The Opportunity of Mobile Technology for Healthcare in the Developing World, commissioned by the United Nations and Vodafone Foundation Technology Partnership, was launched at last week’s mobile phone conference in Barcelona.

The report surveys the current mHealth landscape, and highlights over 50 examples of mHealth projects in developing countries.

Ariel Pablos-Mendez, managing director at the Rockefeller Foundation said, “The rapidly-growing field of mHealth is a case study of smart globalization—dynamic partnerships fostering innovative, sustainable solutions to make the broadest possible progress in developing communities.”

He added: “The mHealth Alliance is particularly important as it sits at the apex of mobility and global health advancements. This is a multi-stakeholder opportunity that can bring benefits to mobile operators, healthcare systems and patients alike.”

Link

mHealth for Development

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