Public Health News South Africa

Locker system will cut chronic medication dispensing time

One of the big sticking points in building an equitable healthcare system is getting medication to those who need it, when they need. So a South African entrepreneur is preparing to launch an innovative new automated chronic medicine dispensing system in a pilot project for the national department of health.

Neo Hutiri, an electrical and industrial engineer businessman based in Johannesburg, developed the Technovera locker system, which is designed to shorten the time chronic patients must spend waiting for their repeat prescriptions to be filled, as well as streamlining operations for state healthcare facilities, improving compliance and reducing the cost of chronic patient care.

Source: htxt.co.za
Source: htxt.co.za

Smart locker

The Technovera solution includes a smart locker, an SMS notification system and chronic medication collection tracking. “Patients on antiretroviral therapy (ART) regimens, for example, who are stable chronic patients, typically have a six-month repeat prescription with an evaluation due every six months. For five of every six months, the process of collecting the repeat prescription need not involve the nurse – patients could simply be authenticated and collect their medication,” says Hutiri.

“By introducing this innovation, we can allow for pre-packed medication to be placed in smart locker cubicles and automatically notify the patients via SMS that their prescriptions are ready for collection. Each patient is validated by entering a one-time PIN and their cellphone number, which electronically unlocks their compartment.”

The solution has been developed in close consultation with the Innovation Hub, the department of health, the City of Tshwane and the City of Johannesburg, as well as with medical and pharmaceutical stakeholders and patients themselves.

“Proving compliance, security and confidentiality, as well as ensuring that the system innovates within the constraints of a highly regulated environment, has been challenging,” says Hutiri. However, he believes that the digitised, smart system will deliver a broad range of benefits to healthcare service providers and patients alike, with the potential to integrate into other centralised health care and patient management systems for enhanced service delivery in future.

Innovation wins tech competitions

Hutiri's innovation won R1m in the Hack.Jozi, as well as R50,000 in start-up capital and access to over R 300,000 worth of business support tools in the Samsung Launching People - Mixed Talents challenge.

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