Stop TB Partnership launches Digital Health Technology Hub to contribute to the transformation of TB response
18 January 2021, Geneva, Switzerland – The Stop TB Partnership launched today the Digital Health Technology Hub (DHT Hub), a unifying virtual platform that brings together the organization’s expertise and work in the digital health technology space to support the achievement of the United Nations High-Level Meeting on Tuberculosis (UNHLM on TB) commitments and targets.
The Stop TB Partnership’s DHT Hub will initially focus
on the following key areas:
- Build and expand the evidence, information, and experience of the appropriate use of digital health technologies, especially, but not limited to TB response;
- Source and identify, accelerate the roll-out, and catalyze the integrated platform of various digital health technologies for TB and across diseases;
- Catalyze the accelerated development and roll-out of promising digital health technologies for TB and across disease; and
- Create a space for our partners from country programs, implementing partners, civil society and communities to understand about evidence-based digital health technologies for the TB response and provide technical support to implement and scale-up these solutions.
“Almost every day, I learn from our in-country partners
about how critical digital health technologies are and have been
to ensure people affected by TB are receiving the proper care
and treatment they deserve and need during lockdowns and with
healthcare facilities being at their breaking point due to the
COVID-19 pandemic. I am excited that we have set-up the DHT Hub
to strengthen our current and future work in the digital health
technologies space, and I am confident it will serve as another
stronghold in our fight to end TB by 2030,” said
Dr. Lucica Ditiu, Executive Director, Stop TB Partnership.
Over the past seven years, the Stop TB Partnership,
together with its various public and private sector partners,
has been at the forefront of advocating for, sourcing,
evaluating, introducing, and scaling-up digital health
technologies:
-
TB REACH
has been at the forefront of evaluating and implementing
emerging digital health technologies, including computer-aided
detection of TB in chest x-rays, digital adherence
technologies for differentiated TB care, drones for delivering
TB medicines, and handheld x-ray devices. This work continues
to inform international guidelines on the use of digital
technology in TB, including the World Health
Organization’s guideline on artificial intelligence for
TB screening as well as the TDR (the Special
Programme for Research and Training in Tropical Disease),
research toolkit for digital technologies and TB.
-
Re-imagining TB Care
initiative focuses on supporting the modernization of
healthcare systems in TB affected countries by transforming
when, where, and how TB affected communities and people access
affordable, quality, and people-centered care by leveraging
promising digital health technologies for TB and across
diseases.
-
Accelerator for Impact (a4i)
platform (with Bamboo Capital Partners and the
HealthAccessLeap (HEAL) fund), provides flexible capital and
technical support to small and medium-enterprises,
particularly from TB affected countries, developing digital
health technologies for TB and across diseases.
- Country & Community Support for Impact (CCS4I) team co-developed OneImpact (with Dure Technologies and community and civil society partners) the community-led digital platform and application, to support community-led monitoring of the TB response.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, the Stop TB Partnership has also
been working closely with its in-country and global partners to
optimize the introduction and scale-up of digital health
technologies to mitigate interruptions in TB services caused by
the global crisis.
“The widespread understanding and roll-out of digital
health technologies are not easy nor a well-tread path. The way
forward is fraught with many obstacles, such as a premature
regulatory environment, poor digital literacy, lack of the
appropriate information and communication infrastructure, data
governance concerns, to name a few. We believe the DHT Hub, by
harnessing our knowledge and expertise in the digital health
technologies space, will serve as the foundation for overcoming
these challenges and propel the modernization of TB care,”
said
Dr. Suvanand Sahu, Deputy Executive Director, Stop TB
Partnership.
“We must seize every opportunity that technology presents
to empower people affected by TB and to strengthen the community
and health systems, driving the response. These tools can help
save lives, so we have no choice but to leverage them and
continue to innovate to reach and support every person affected
by TB. We have already committed to innovating the TB response
and now we have the tools and the imagination to make it a
reality, so let’s do it,” said
Maxime Lunga, National Secretary, Club des Amis Damien, DR
Congo and OneImpact implementer.
Source:
Stop TB Partnership