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Information and communication technologies and health in low income countries: the potential and the constraints

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TLDR
The potential offered by technological progress in the information and communication technologies (ICTs) industries for the health sector in developing countries is outlined, some examples of positive experiences in India are presented, and the difficulties in achieving this potential are considered.
Abstract
This paper outlines the potential offered by technological progress in the information and communication technologies (ICTs) industries for the health sector in developing countries, presents some examples of positive experiences in India, and considers the difficulties in achieving this potential. The development of ICTs can bring about improvements in health in developing countries in at least three ways: as an instrument for continuing education they enable health workers to be informed of and trained in advances in knowledge; they can improve the delivery of health and disaster management services to poor and remote locations; and they can increase the transparency and efficiency of governance, which should, in turn, improve the availability and delivery of publicly provided health services. These potential benefits of ICTs do not necessarily require all the final beneficiaries to be reached directly, thus the cost of a given quantum of effect is reduced. Some current experiments in India, such as the use of Personal Digital Assistants by rural health workers in Rajasthan, the disaster management project in Maharashtra and the computerized village offices in Andhra Pradesh and Pondicherry, suggest creative ways of using ICTs to improve the health conditions of local people. However, the basic difficulties encountered in using ICTs for such purposes are: an inadequate physical infrastructure; insufficient access by the majority of the population to the hardware; and a lack of the requisite skills for using them. We highlight the substantial cost involved in providing wider access, and the problem of resource allocation in poor countries where basic infrastructure for health and education is still lacking. Educating health professionals in the possible uses of ICTs, and providing them with access and "connectivity", would in turn spread the benefits to a much wider set of final beneficiaries and might help reduce the digital divide.

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Challenges and opportunities related to postgraduate evidence-based practice module using blended learning

TL;DR: The challenges and opportunities encountered by an Evidence Based Practice (EBP) postgraduate class who used the blended learning model of learning were highlighted to highlight the challenges and identify opportunities encountered.
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Health outcome and expenditure in low-income countries: does increasing diffusion of information and communication technology matter?

TL;DR: ICT is not only a means for providing better healthcare services but also an essential instrument for popularizing healthcare access and use for all and impacts both the health outcome and expenditure, positively and significantly.
Journal Article

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Book ChapterDOI

Leveraging ICT for Food Security: An Analysis in the Context of PDS in India

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyzed the impact of various ICT initiatives and its impact on food security in India and found that there exists a positive correlation between reforms like ICT intervention and effectiveness of food security system.
References
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Book

Public report on basic education in India

Probe Team
TL;DR: The Public Report of Basic Education in India presents a comprehensive evaluation of the educational system in India with an extensive survey of 200 villages in five states.
Journal ArticleDOI

Why are Some People Healthy and Others Not? The Determinants of the Health of Populations.

TL;DR: This is a fascinating collection of essays exploring "why some people are healthy and others not," from a variety of disciplines and theoretical perspectives that challenges the widespread belief that health care is the most important determinant of health and argues for a more comprehensive and coherent understanding of the determinants of health.
Journal ArticleDOI

Why Are Some People Healthy and Others Not? The Determinants of Health of Populations

TL;DR: In this paper, composite solar cells of improved efficiency comprise two cells of different characteristics arranged in optical series but electrically insulated from each other, each cell is of larger crystal grain size than its substrate, which grain size is achieved by growing the cell semiconductor on a molten intermediate rheotaxy layer of a suitable semi-conductor which solidifies at a temperature below the melting temperature of the solar cell.
Book

Information and Communication Technology in Development: Cases from India

TL;DR: In this paper, the successful use of information and communication technology (ICT) in rural development is discussed, and sixteen case studies are presented, which spell out the various applications of ICT that have made a difference in the delivery of services or products in rural India.
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