Discourse, Materiality, and the Users of Mobile Health Technologies: A Nigerian Case Study
Yilin Liu
- 19 Jan 2023
TL;DR: In this article , a National Health ICT Strategic Framework (Strategic Framework), 2015-2020, was published, with the rallying call that health ICTs will deliver universal healthcare [in Nigeria] by 2020.
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Abstract: mHealth, which is the use of mobile phones and other handheld information and communication technologies (ICTs), has been increasingly advocated as the solution to the problems, primarily infrastructure and personnel, facing the healthcare sector of many low-to-lower-middle-income countries (LMICs). Following a series of United Nations Foundation research and advisory publications (in 2012, 2014 and 2016) arguing that mobile phones are approaching ubiquity in Nigeria and across the world, the UN strongly recommended that LMICs undertake mHealth initiatives. Subsequently, Nigeria’s Federal Ministry of Health (FMOH) published a National Health ICT Strategic Framework (Strategic Framework), 2015-2020; the rallying call of this document is that “Health ICTs will deliver universal healthcare [in Nigeria] by 2020.” The document takes a techno-optimistic position that celebrates and advocates for the creation of mHealth technologies, yet it fails to acknowledge the dire lack of the basic, necessary infrastructures for such electronic health systems, particularly in rural areas, including a scarcity of reliable electrical systems or the trained personnel who would understand how to use such technologies. This creates and sustains a healthcare precarity for poor and rural Nigerians.
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Foreword: Technical and Professional Communication
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TL;DR: The essay genre Keywords collection project aims to provide a comprehensive resource for the field of technical and professional communication.
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