Posts

5 HealthTech Rules for Africa in 2026. The Wild West is Over.

Image
 The era of unregulated growth for African healthtech is officially over. A new analysis warns founders that 2026 brings a strict compliance regime where "moving fast and breaking things" could lead to prison time. Governments across the continent are enforcing five critical pillars of regulation: mandatory licensing for telemedicine and AI (with up to 5-year jail terms in Nigeria), strict data privacy laws now active in over half the continent, and enforced interoperability using HL7/FHIR standards to plug into national health systems. Additionally, the Africa CDC is rolling out a unified framework for cross-border data sharing, expected to be endorsed next month. Founders are urged to appoint Data Protection Officers immediately and adopt "compliance by design," as the days of operating in the gray zone have come to an abrupt end. Read the original article at: https://www.techinafrica.com/healthtech-regulation-2025-founders-need-know/

Africa Health & Tech Insights: January 8 - January 14

Image
mHealth is saving stroke patients in Africa, but infrastructure gaps and costs threaten to cut the connection Cardiovascular diseases including stroke are rising sharply across Africa placing immense strain on already overburdened healthcare systems. A new scoping review covering over a decade of research highlights mobile health as a critical lifeline for managing these conditions. By utilizing smartphone apps and simple SMS messaging services providers have been able to support post event care and improve medication adherence for stroke survivors. However, the review warns that the potential of this technology is currently limited by significant barriers. Low digital literacy among rural populations and the high cost of data access frequently prevent patients from maintaining the connection with their care teams. The authors conclude that for mobile health to truly scale policymakers must prioritize upgrading digital infrastructure and designing cost effective low bandwidth interve...

A new proposal aims to use AI and real-time mobile surveillance to stop the next infectious outbreak before it spreads

Image
 Sub Saharan Africa faces a persistent threat from infectious disease outbreaks often exacerbated by delays in detection and reporting. A new comprehensive grant proposal outlines a strategy to overhaul the region's surveillance capabilities using digital health solutions. The plan calls for the deployment of real time mobile reporting tools and artificial intelligence driven dashboards that can predict outbreaks before they spiral out of control. By integrating electronic medical records from local clinics directly into national databases the system aims to close the time gap between the first case and the public health response. The proposal emphasizes sustainability through training thousands of local health workers and partnering with telecom providers to ensure connectivity. If funded this initiative could create a resilient digital shield against future epidemics significantly enhancing public health security across the continent. Read the original article at: https://www....

Cyberattacks have surged 30%, exposing terabytes of sensitive biological data

Image
 South Africa is facing a rapidly escalating cybersecurity crisis in its healthcare sector as evidenced by a massive ransomware attack on the National Health Laboratory Service. Legal experts report that cyberattacks on African healthcare institutions have surged by thirty percent in just one year with attackers increasingly targeting sensitive biological data. The recent breach exposed over one terabyte of private information highlighting the devastating potential of these intrusions. While privacy laws exist enforcement remains weak and many institutions lack the governance frameworks to protect patient data effectively. Security analysts warn that as the continent rushes to adopt artificial intelligence in healthcare the attack surface will only grow. There is an urgent need for stricter regulatory oversight and robust ethical frameworks to ensure that the drive for digital innovation does not come at the cost of patient privacy and safety. Read the original article at: https...

It’s not just the tracker; it’s the tribe. Group-based digital support is proven to significantly boost physical activity

Image
 A new study challenges the idea that wearable trackers alone are enough to change behavior. Research focusing on African American women using fitness trackers found that the social component was the real driver of success. Participants who actively engaged in private messaging groups within the app sharing motivational quotes and personal progress photos took significantly more steps than those who used the tracker in isolation. The findings suggest that the sense of community or tribe created through digital platforms provides the necessary emotional support to sustain physical activity over time. This has important implications for designing future health interventions indicating that digital tools should prioritize social connectivity and peer support features rather than just raw data tracking to be effective for at risk populations. Read the original article at: https://mhealth.jmir.org/2025/1/e68006 Follow us on Instagram , Twitter , and Facebook to stay up to date wi...

mHealth is saving stroke patients in Africa, but infrastructure gaps and costs threaten to cut the connection

Image
 Cardiovascular diseases including stroke are rising sharply across Africa placing immense strain on already overburdened healthcare systems. A new scoping review covering over a decade of research highlights mobile health as a critical lifeline for managing these conditions. By utilizing smartphone apps and simple SMS messaging services providers have been able to support post event care and improve medication adherence for stroke survivors. However, the review warns that the potential of this technology is currently limited by significant barriers. Low digital literacy among rural populations and the high cost of data access frequently prevent patients from maintaining the connection with their care teams. The authors conclude that for mobile health to truly scale policymakers must prioritize upgrading digital infrastructure and designing cost effective low bandwidth interventions that work on basic phones not just smartphones. Read the original article at: http://heart.bmj.co...

Africa Healthcare: January 1 - January 7, 2026

Image
Babyl Rwanda proved telemedicine worked, then collapsed due to corporate bankruptcy. An insightful analysis examines the rise and fall of Babyl Rwanda, a digital health service that became a poster child for successful telemedicine in Africa. Before its sudden shutdown, Babyl had registered nearly 30% of Rwanda's adult population and completed over 2.5 million consultations, proving that digital triage could effectively reduce the burden on physical health centers. The service worked because it was built for the local context—using USSD codes for basic phones and integrating deeply with the national health insurance scheme (Mutuelle de Santé). However, the service collapsed not because of local failure, but due to the bankruptcy of its UK-based parent company, Babylon Health. The article highlights the "Babyl Paradox": a locally sustainable and impactful project was destroyed by the financial mismanagement of its global corporate owner. This case serves as a stark warning...