Bringing Tech to Beat COVID-19 in Nepal

 

 

Image: Oxygen concentrators donated by Community Partners International, the MIT Group Foundation and the Bhrikuti Devi Trust are delivered to an oxygen concentrator bank in Nepalgunj, Banke District, western Nepal. (CPI)

804Bringing Tech to Beat COVID-19 in Nepal

COVID-19 moves fast and ever faster as new, more infectious variants emerge. This challenges all public health systems, especially those in low-resource settings like Nepal. In these contexts, the ability to track resource needs and gaps in an accurate and timely way and deploy limited resources efficiently becomes even more crucial in the race to save lives. Seeking to address these challenges in Nepal, Community Partners International (CPI), the blockchain tech company Ibriz, and the design agency Kazi Studios have created an open online platform called Relief Connect — reliefconnect.org.

Relief Connect is an online map-based data platform that tracks COVID-19 resource availability and needs across Nepal. Using real-time data provided by a consortium of data partners, the platform helps Nepal’s Ministry of Health and Population, health providers, aid agencies, and the general public see where resources are needed most and coordinate the response.

In the last two months, Nepal has experienced a catastrophic spike in COVID-19 cases. Health facilities have been overwhelmed, and there are widespread shortages of critical care facilities, oxygen supplies, medicines, test kits, and personal protective equipment.

“The Relief Connect platform grew out of our efforts to meet the oxygen needs of COVID-19 patients in remote locations in Nepal,” explains Bijay Niraula, CPI’s COVID-19 Response Lead in Nepal and Ibriz CEO. We were distributing oxygen concentrators around the country, using QR codes to track them, but there was no quick way to track needs in real-time and coordinate the response.”

“We’d receive scattered reports of urgent needs for oxygen and isolation kits from different parts of the country, but it was difficult to verify exact needs and quickly coordinate with other organizations to avoid duplication,” continues Bijay. “Also, there was no efficient and timely way to identify a resource surplus so that we could redeploy to organizations in need.”

While still in beta version, the Relief Connect platform is helping to solve these challenges. “All MoHP-approved hospitals and isolation centers are now mapped on Relief Connect. This gives the viewer an immediate understanding of where the most under-served areas are,” explains Bijay.

“We are mapping the demand and supply data of COVID-19 isolation kits in municipalities across Nepal and the number and location of oxygen concentrators supplied by partners. This means we know our resources and where and where they are most needed. With this information, we can coordinate resource distribution and redeploy resources as COVID-19 outbreaks move.”

The Relief Connect platform has been brought to life with important contributions from several partners, including Community Partners International, Ibriz, and Kazi Studios. It was developed with support from the MIT Group Foundation, Bitsbeat, the Nepal Healthcare Equipment Development Foundation, and the Kitten Nursery Club. Data partners include Mountain Heart Nepal and the Bhrikuti Devi Trust. Advisors include the Nepal Institute for Development Studies and the Nepal Ministry of Health and Population.

Relief Connect partners will continue to expand and update the platform data to support Nepal’s COVID-19 response. “We are also looking at how we can use the Relief Connect data platform to support other countries in the region with similar needs, such as Bangladesh and Sri Lanka,” reveals Bijay. We think it could have a positive impact on their COVID-19 response, too, and support similar efforts across South Asia.”

Relief Connect is part of broader efforts by Community Partners International and partners to provide emergency COVID-19 relief to Nepal. To date, Community Partners International, the MIT Group Foundation, and the Bhrikuti Devi Trust have extended critical COVID-19 support to the Nepal health system, including the provision of 380 oxygen concentrators and other essential supplies, including gloves, masks, sanitizers, and personal protective equipment (PPE). These supplies have been distributed across various districts in Nepal, focusing on remote and under-served central and far-western regions.

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