KENYA – Top health and technology stakeholders in Africa have called for the strengthening of national supply chains by focusing on the role of data and technology in policy and regulatory frameworks, manufacturing processes, and resource mobilization in order to augment the continent’s post-COVID-19 health security systems.

The experts, who were drawn from the Ministries of Health of five East African nations, were speaking in Nairobi during the Africa Healthcare Supply Chain dialogue 2022.

Present at the convention were the continent’s multilateral agencies, tech and financial sectors, manufacturers, and donor organizations who shared insights and mapped out opportunities for the continent’s healthcare system post-pandemic.

According to Kenya’s Health Chief Administrative Secretary (CAS) Rashid Raman, every link of the health supply chain is of great importance as it ensures that essential vaccines, medicines, and healthcare products make it from manufacturing plants to persons who are most vulnerable across the continent.

Africa continues to lag behind in adoption and use of technology to manage healthcare supply chains. The continent’s healthcare supply chains should be designed in such a way that they are capable of adapting to shifting demands and requirements for routine products and emergency situations such as COVID-19 and other pandemics,” said Dr. Aman.

Healthcare is one of the industries most impacted by supply chain issues during the Covid pandemic.

Stakeholders in health care delivery, including governments and industry players, have been urged to use technology to mitigate risk, increase efficiencies, and build resilience in the future.

Xetova CEO Bramuel Mwalo while speaking at the summit noted that strong supply chains help ensure that essential healthcare products and services including medicines, vaccines, and resources make it from the warehouse to the populations when and where they need them.

Every link of the supply chain counts and there is an urgent need to premise these cycles on strong adoption of data and technology.

The forum convened by Xetova, Safaricom, and the Ministry of Health drew participation from Government officials in Rwanda, the DRC, Uganda, and Tanzania with the aim of identifying opportunities for collaboration between the private sector, public institutions, and key stakeholders to redefine access to health care across the continent.

Safaricom’s Chief Enterprise Business Officer, Mr. Chris Senanu said, “Our aim is to use using artificial intelligence and big data to power a more proactive, data-driven decision-making process in the health sector.

This will enhance national consumption-planning for essential healthcare products and their just-in-time delivery to the various healthcare facilities.”

The summit, which will be held across other key hubs of African regions will consequently move to establish collaborations with governments and partners to strengthen national supply chains, focusing on data and technology, policy and regulatory frameworks, operations and processes, and financing and resource mobilization.

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