3 research outputs found

    COVID-19 and Teleneurology in Sub-Saharan Africa: Leveraging the Current Exigency

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    tion residing in rural areas that have poor access to medical experts. Despite having a ridiculously huge, underserved population, very few African countries currently have any form of sustained and organized telemedicine practice, and even fewer have dedicated tele-neurology services. The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic has proved to be one of the most significant disruptors of vital sectors of human endeavor in modern times. In the healthcare sector, there is an increasing advocacy to deliver non-urgent care via telemedicine. This paper examined the current state of tele-neurology practice and infrastructural preparedness in sub-Saharan Africa. Currently, there is over 70% mobile phone penetration in most of the countries and virtually all of them have mobile internet services of different technologies and generations. Although the needed infrastructure is increasingly available, it should be improved upon. We have proposed the access, costs, ethics, and support (ACES) model as a bespoke, holistic strategy for the successful implementation and advancement of tele-neurology in sub-Saharan Afric

    sj-docx-1-dhj-10.1177_20552076221150072 - Supplemental material for Telemedicine ready or not? A cross-sectional assessment of telemedicine maturity of federally funded tertiary health institutions in Nigeria

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    Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-dhj-10.1177_20552076221150072 for Telemedicine ready or not? A cross-sectional assessment of telemedicine maturity of federally funded tertiary health institutions in Nigeria by Tolulope F Olufunlayo, Oluwadamilola O Ojo, Obianuju B Ozoh, Osigwe P Agabi, Chuks R Opara, Funmilola T Taiwo and Olufemi A Fasanmade, Njideka U Okubadejo in Digital Health</p
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