Author/Authors :
Mengistu Kifle، نويسنده , , Victor W.A. Mbarika، نويسنده , , Pratim Datta، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
The authors examine the need and adoption of teleophthalmology
in sub-Saharan Africa. Ethiopia, like most
sub-Saharan African countries, is faced with limited
specialists and health care services. These services
are often concentrated in the urban areas, leaving most
of the rural population (about 70% of the country)
without adequate and timely health care delivery. In
Ethiopia, the ratio of ophthalmologists to the population
is 1:1,200,000, resulting in inadequate delivery of
ophthalmology-related health care services. Using both
primary and secondary data collection approaches, the
authors report the need for telemedicine as well as the
adoption and application of teleophthalmology in Ethiopia.
Further, they present Ethiopia’s teleophthalmology network,
integrated teleconsultation, and teleeducation
services. The authors conclude by presenting this
research as a starting point to investigate further
teleophthalmology and other telemedicine services for
Ethiopia and by extension, other developing countries.
Therefore, they bring a much-underresearched region
(sub-Saharan Africa) and a much-underresearched
technology (telemedicine) to the forefront of information
systems (IS) research. It is the authors’ hope that
colleagues in the field will be motivated to investigate
this “forgotten” region of the world that is yet to reap
the full potentials of information and communications
technologies (ICTs).