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    Digitalization of health care in low- and middle-income countries

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    Digitalization of health care in low- and middle-income countries.pdf (952.8Kb)
    Date
    2025-02-01
    Author
    Monlezun, Dominique J
    Omutoko, Lillian
    Oduor, Patience
    Kokonya, Donald
    Rayel, John
    Sotomayor, Claudia
    Girault, Maria Ines
    Uriarte, María Elizabeth De Los Ríos
    Sinyavskiy, Oleg
    Aksamit, Timothy
    Dugani, Sagar B
    Garcia, Alberto
    Gallagher, Colleen
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    Abstract
    The rising incidence of noncommunicable diseases, combined with the costs of mitigating climate change, sovereign debt and regional conflicts, is undermining global health security and threatening progress towards achieving the sustainable development goals of the United Nations. The negative impact of these polycrises is disproportionately borne by low- and middle-income countries, which have the highest disease burden and lowest health-care spending. Health digitalization is emerging as a promising countermeasure, accelerated by artificial intelligence (AI) software and quantum computing hardware. We provide a multisector critical analysis of the three key enablers - governance, infrastructure and security - of the responsible AI-enabled digitalization for safe, affordable, equitable and sustainable health-care systems in low- and middle-income countries. We consider leading use cases in public-private partnerships, democratized sovereign AI and embedded human security. Our analysis proposes that these use cases demonstrate how digital AI-accelerated global health may be advanced as human-centred managed strategic competition. We conducted our analysis through an inclusive range of theoretical perspectives and practical experience spanning academia, industry and practice across the world. We provide recommendations for the responsible management of the key enablers to accelerate global health for all. We anticipate that this paper will be useful for public health decision-makers, both in low- and middle-income countries leading local health digitalization, and in high-income countries supporting this transaction through their technologies, funding and knowledge exchange.
    URI
    https://DOI.ORG/10.2471/BLT.24.291643
    https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC11774219/pdf/BLT.24.291643.pdf
    http://ir-library.mmust.ac.ke:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/3143
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