2 research outputs found

    Women and eHealth 2010 – 2015: From the Study to the Women Observatory for eHealth

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    Improving access to information and communication technologies (ICT) and making these services affordable to all are prerequisites to their efficient and sustainable use in healthcare and eHealth. Women worldwide still face barriers that keep them away from innovation and limit their taking full advantage of eHealth and telemedicine. To help address these barriers, Millennia2015, an initiative of the Destree Institute, conducted the Women and eHealth Study 2010 – 2012 (WeHealth) to identify barriers and trends in the emerging arena of Women, Health and ICT. The study proposed a set of solutions to the identified barriers, including a mapping of Women’s involvement in eHealth. Forging ahead on the Study's proposals, the new Millennia2025 Foundation “Women and Innovation”, a Public Utility Foundation, and its partners, have developed Action Plans to ensure the full participation of women in eHealth and telemedicine. These Plans include diverse initiatives, such as the WeObservatory, which provides support to 15 WeHealth projects in 11 countries, WeTelemed, WeBlog, WeMOOCs, WePatients, WeLibrary, and two mobile multilingual applications: UniversalNurses and UniversalWomen, available in six languages. Improving the role of women in eHealth requires commitment and effort, and the Millennia2025 Foundation is committed to accelerating women's access to innovation and technologies for health around the world.

    Zero Mothers Die: A Global Project to Reduce Maternal and Newborn Mortality through the Systematic Application of Mobile Health and ICTs

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    With almost 300,000 women and six million children under-five continuing to die each year, it is imperative that we start applying the innovation and progress made in the private sector to reducing these unacceptably high mortality rates in developing nations. Launched in September 2014 at the United Nations Headquarters during the Women Leaders Forum, Zero Mothers Die is a unique global public-private partnership to systematically deploy mobile technology and ICT solutions to reduce maternal and newborn mortality. Zero Mothers Die seeks to bring mobile health solutions to pregnant women to increase their access to healthy pregnancy information and emergency care, as well as empower healthcare workers through capacity-building in the area of maternal, newborn and child health. The aim of Zero Mothers Die is to facilitate the delivery of innovation and low-resource technology for healthcare into nations where maternal and child mortality rates remain high, by constantly updating the Zero Mothers Die project model components and supporting countries in convening local public-private partnerships to implement Zero Mothers Die initiatives in their country
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