Health

Vodafone Launches Betavine Social Exchange, Matchmaker for Mobile Solutions

Posted by KatrinVerclas on Oct 15, 2009

After months of work, Betavine Social Exchange, a matching site for mobile solutions in development and for social impact, launched yesterday.  Supported by Vodafone, Betvaine Social Exchange hopes to connect NGOs seeking mobile solutions to their challenges with developers and community partners. 

NGOs are invited to post a challenge that outlines their specific problem.  According to Steve Wolak, Betavine's principal manager, after a challenge has been posed, "everyone in the community is welcome to join in the discussion. When a mobile developer comes up with a technological solution, he or she uploads it into a solutions page. Organisations who have registered as BSX Support Partners may then step in to assist with deployment."

Innovative Use of Cell Phone Technology for HIV/AIDS Behaviour Change Communications: Three Pilot Projects

Posted by AnneryanHeatwole on Oct 09, 2009
Innovative Use of Cell Phone Technology for HIV/AIDS Behaviour Change Communications: Three Pilot Projects data sheet 5526 Views
Author: 
Katherine de Tolly, Helen Alexander
Publication Date: 
Mar 2009
Publication Type: 
Report/White paper
Abstract: 

The opportunities in South Africa for using mobile technologies to support initiatives in the HIV/AIDS sector are enormous. A huge number of people have cellphone access, and there are a range of innovative ways in which cellphones can be used to support treatment, disseminate information, provide anonymous counselling, gather data and link patients to services.

Cell-Life is an NGO based in Cape Town, South Africa, that seeks to improve the lives of people infected and affected by HIV through the appropriate use of technology.

This paper describes three pilot interventions that use cellphones for behaviour change communication; i.e. that are experimenting with different cellphone technologies to disseminate information, undertaken as part of Cell-Life’s Cellphones4HIV project: ARV adherence SMSs, USSD content delivery and content delivery via MXit. Challenges around measuring impact in behaviour change communications are briefly discussed, and some of Cell-Life’s upcoming initiatives are outlined.

As Kaplan points out in his 2006 literature review of the subject, “There is almost no literature on using mobile telephones as a healthcare intervention for HIV, TB, malaria, and chronic conditions in developing countries”. Although the initiatives discussed in this paper are very much in their infancy, we hope that by sharing our ideas and approaches with others in the field we will generate discussion around some of the practicalities of mHealth.


The Impact of Mobile Phones on the Status of Women in India

Posted by AnneryanHeatwole on Oct 09, 2009
The Impact of Mobile Phones on the Status of Women in India data sheet 5153 Views
Author: 
Dayoung Lee
Publication Date: 
May 2009
Publication Type: 
Report/White paper
Abstract: 

Mobile phones have grown at an extraordinary rate throughout the developing world in recent years. They are potentially an invaluable economic asset to the poor and an important tool for strengthening social ties. Mobile phones may also help women overcome physical boundaries, especially in places where they are separated from their support networks and bound within their husband’s social sphere.

This paper examines the impact of mobile phones on the status of women in India. Using nation-wide cross-sectional data at the individual level, the author builds on Jensen and Oster’s model for measuring women’s status. The author uses domestic violence, decision-making autonomy, child preferences and economic independence as proxies for bargaining power and status of women in their household and society.

Mobile phones significantly decrease both men and women’s tolerance for domestic violence, increase women’s autonomy in mobility and economic independence, but do not have significant effects on child preferences and other measures of autonomy. Where the effects are significant, they are also large and in some cases equivalent to more than five years of education. These results suggest that the Government of India and those of other countries should consider mobile phones as a policy instrument for empowering women.


Deconstructing Mobile: Can m-Health Fill the Gap of Underdeveloped Healthcare Systems?

Posted by KatrinVerclas on Oct 08, 2009

As part of our 'deconstructing mobile' series, we have been looking closely at the claims that have been made about mobile technology for a more realistic assessment of mobiles in social development that is based on data, rather than hype.  Unlike more recent reporting on the topic, the Financial Times has an interesting article that questions whether mobile tech can actually "fill the gap left by underdeveloped healthcare system,' particularly in Africa.

As has been reported, the challenges in delivering health care in many African countries are stark. As the Financial Times points, out, there is 'an acute shortage of resources and trained staff means that more than 50 percent of the region’s population is estimated to lack access to modern healthcare facilities."

ICT Access And Usage in Africa

Posted by AnneryanHeatwole on Oct 08, 2009
ICT Access And Usage in Africa data sheet 5298 Views
Author: 
Alison Gillwald, Christoph Stork
ISSN/ISBN Number: 
2073
Publication Date: 
Jan 2008
Publication Type: 
Journal article
Abstract: 

This paper is part of a series that contributes to evidence-based Information Communication Technology (ICT) policy formulation and regulation on the continent by providing decision makers with the information and analysis necessary to assess the regulatory impact and policy outcomes of telecommunications reform against actual sector performance.

It reports on the findings of the second household and individual user survey of access and usage conducted by RIA between 2007 and 2008 across 17 African countries. It builds on the first household survey conducted by RIA in 2004/5 and a number of subsequent supply-side studies that have demonstrated that across the continent, even where there has been overall sector growth, sector performance has been sub-optimal.

For the most part, the primary national policy objectives of delivering affordable access to telecommunications have not been met. What the studies confirm is that mobile telephony is addressing the gap between those who have voice services and those who do not.

However, the divide between those able to access the Internet and the range of enhanced services that have become necessary for effective citizenry and consumer participation, and those not able, has widened. This is not only as a result of limited access but also due to the high cost of communications that not only inhibits access but also constrains individual communication and inflates the input cost to business. This demand-side survey provides insight into the continued marginalisation of large numbers of Africans, even from basic communications services, and confirms the sub-optimal use of communications services due to the high cost of access to services. 

The value attached to accessing and utilising communications is evident in the considerable portion of household income spent on communications and the multiple strategies used by individuals to maintain communication access according to their cash flow and the prices of alternatives. The willingness-to-pay model arising from the survey suggests that relatively small reductions in the cost of equipment and services would result in increased uptake and usage, with a significant growth in revenue for operators.

There is also evidence of considerable pent-up demand in countries such as Côte d’Ivoire, for example, where the amount that those without mobile services would be willing to pay for a handset is roughly the same price as the real cost of a handset.

What these findings indicate is that sector reforms have generally been sub-optimal. The introduction of limited competition particularly in mobile services has indisputably improved access particularly to voice services but insufficient competition or effective price regulation has constrained take-up and usage amongst those who have access to communication services and resulted in high prices.


Mobile Phones and Development: An Analysis of IDRC-Supported Projects

Posted by AnneryanHeatwole on Oct 08, 2009
Mobile Phones and Development: An Analysis of IDRC-Supported Projects data sheet 3613 Views
Author: 
Ahmed T. Rashid, Laurent Elder
Publication Date: 
Jan 2009
Publication Type: 
Journal article
Abstract: 

In the context of the rapid growth of mobile phone penetration in developing countries, mobile telephony is currently considered to be particularly important for development. Yet, until recently, very little systematic evidence was available that shed light on the developmental impacts of mobile telecommunication.

The Information and Communication Technology for Development (ICT4D) program of the International Development Research Centre (IDRC), Canada, has played a critical role in filling some of the research gaps through its partnerships with several key actors in this area.

The objective of this paper is to evaluate the case of mobile phones as a tool in solving development problems drawing from the evidence of IDRC supported projects. IDRC has supported around 20 projects that cut across several themes such as livelihoods, poverty reduction, health, education, the environment and disasters. The projects will be analyzed by theme in order to provide a thematic overview as well as a comparative analysis of the development role of mobile phones. In exploring the evidence from completed projects as well as the foci of new projects, the paper summarizes and critically assesses the key findings and suggests possible avenues for future research.


Posted by on Jan 01, 1970

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Open Data Kit (ODK)

Posted by yanokwa on Oct 06, 2009
Open Data Kit (ODK) data sheet 13959 Views
Organization that developed the Tool: 
Main Contact: 
Open Data Kit
Problem or Need: 

Collecting data and delivering information developing regions is hard.

Main Contact Email : 
Brief Description: 

Open Data Kit is a set of free tools used all over the world to make data collection and information delivery easier.

Tool Category: 
App resides and runs on a mobile phone
App resides and runs on a server
Is a web-based application/web service
Key Features : 

Open Data Kit primarily provides an out-of-the-box solution for users to:

  • Build a data collection form or survey
  • Collect the data on a mobile device and send it to a server
  • Aggregate the collected data on a server and extract it in useful formats

See http://opendatakit.org/about/tools for a listing of all our tools.

Main Services: 
Interactive Voice Response (IVR)
Multi-Media Messaging (MMS) or other Multi-Media
2D Barcodes
Voting, Data Collection, Surveys, and Polling
Location-Specific Services and GIS
Information Resources/Information Databases
Stand-alone Application
Display tool in profile: 
Yes
Tool Maturity: 
Currently deployed
Release Date: 
2009-10
Platforms: 
Android
Linux/UNIX
Mac/Apple/iPhone
Windows
Program/Code Language: 
Java/Android
Java
Other
Organizations Using the Tool: 
Number of Current End Users: 
1,000-10,000
Number of current beneficiaries: 
10,000-100,000
Support Forums: 
http://opendatakit.org/about/contact
Languages supported: 
All
Handsets/devices supported: 
Primarily Android-based devices, but we do support other Java-based phones.
Reviews/Evaluations: 
http://opendatakit.org/about/research http://opendatakit.org/about/press
Is the Tool's Code Available?: 
Yes
URL for license: 
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Is an API available to interface with your tool?: 
Yes
Featured?: 
Yes

NEW: A Guide on How to Set Up an SMS System

Posted by KatrinVerclas on Oct 05, 2009

In our ongoing series of How-To Guides, here is the newest:  an overview on how to set up an SMS system. 

SMS is everywhere, in an amazing diversity of applications. From enabling 'instant protest' in the Philippines, Spain and Albania, to election monitoring in Ghana, Lebanon, and Sierra Leone to HIV/AIDS education and support in Mexico and South Africa, we've seen that 160 characters can make a difference. This article covers the basics of setting up an SMS campaign system, looking at different approaches to suit your goals, budget and technical expertise.

Read the full How-To Set Up an SMS System here.

How to Set Up an SMS System

Posted by MelissaLoudon on Oct 04, 2009
How to Set Up an SMS System data sheet 67355 Views
Author: 
Melissa Loudon
Abstract: 

SMS is everywhere, in an amazing diversity of applications. From enabling 'instant protest' in the Philippines, Spain and Albania, to election monitoring in Ghana, Lebanon, and Sierra Leone to HIV/AIDS education and support in Mexico and South Africa, we've seen that 160 characters can make a difference. This article covers the basics of setting up an SMS campaign system, looking at different approaches to suit your goals, budget and technical expertise.

SMS is everywhere, in an amazing diversity of applications. From enabling 'instant protest' in the Philippines, Spain and Albania, to election monitoring in Ghana, Lebanon, and Sierra Leone to HIV/AIDS education and support in Mexico and South Africa, we've seen that 160 characters can make a difference. This How-To covers the basics of setting up an SMS campaign system, looking at different approaches to suit your goals, budget and technical expertise.

What do you want the system to do?

Before you start, it's important to have a clear vision of how you want to use the system, and who the target audience might be. You should also do a level-headed audit of the resources available, including funding as well as staff time and technical expertise. If this doesn't look promising, take heart! Sometimes the most effective systems are the simplest, and you don't need a big budget for many types of SMS campaigns.


15 Years Later, Still No Sexual Health Services, And a Mobile Petition

Posted by CorinneRamey on Oct 03, 2009

For the International Planned Parenthood Federation, the number 15 just made sense.  It is now 15 years since the Cairo International Conference on Population and Development, when 179 governments agreed on a yet-unfulfilled plan to provide universal sexual health services by the year 2015.  With the children born the year of the conference now 15 years old, the foundation felt it was time to act.

So the campaign 15andcounting was born. The campaign aims to engage young people in sexual health advocacy, mainly by having them sign a petition and complete a survey accessible both on the web and on a mobile WAP site. The petition will be presented to the United Nations in mid-October.

"They need access to condoms and high quality information, and all these services that were talked about in 1994," said Chris Wells, creative design director of the International Planned Parenthood Foundation, of the 15-year-olds born the year of the conference.

mobiSiteGalore

Posted by PrabhasPokharel on Oct 01, 2009
mobiSiteGalore data sheet 6708 Views
Organization that developed the Tool: 
Main Contact: 
David Hill (Director, Mobile Web Initiative at Akmin Technologies)
Problem or Need: 

Allows user to create .mobi sites with an easy to use interface.

Main Contact Email : 
Brief Description: 

mobiSiteGalore is a free mobile website builder that allows a user to easily build, publish & share a full-fledged mobile website that is guaranteed to work fine on any mobile phone.

Tool Category: 
Is a web-based application/web service
Key Features : 
  • Has mobile emulator to test your sites; all produced sites are 5/5 on ready.mobi tests.
  • Mobile site builder is available on a mobile phone.
  • Provides free 3rd level hosting on http://_.param.mobi site. Self-hosting options also available.
  • Ad integration, mobile widgets, and many such options available.

See mobiSiteGalore's Feature page for more.

Main Services: 
Other
Tool Maturity: 
Currently deployed
Platforms: 
All phones/Mobile Browser
Program/Code Language: 
PHP
Organizations Using the Tool: 

Many. Some examples here.

Support Forums: 
http://forums.mobisitegalore.com/
Languages supported: 
English, Spanish, German, French, Dutch, Italian, Chinese
Handsets/devices supported: 
Any with mobile web browser.
Reviews/Evaluations: 
MobiSite Press page is: http://www.mobisitegalore.com/sp_buzz.htm CMSWire has many articles here: http://www.cmswire.com/news/topic/mobisitegalore
Is the Tool's Code Available?: 
No
Is an API available to interface with your tool?: 
No
Featured?: 
Yes

EpiCollect

Posted by AnneryanHeatwole on Sep 29, 2009
EpiCollect data sheet 6945 Views
Organization that developed the Tool: 
Main Contact: 
David Aanensen
Problem or Need: 

Epidemiologists and ecologists often collect data in the field and, on returning to their laboratory, enter their data into a database for further analysis. The recent introduction of mobile phones that utilise the open source Android operating system, and which include (among other features) both GPS and Google Maps, provide new opportunities for developing mobile phone applications, which in conjunction with web applications, allow two-way communication between field workers and their project databases.

Main Contact Email : 
Brief Description: 

Data collected by multiple field workers can be submitted by phone, together with GPS data, to a common web database and can be displayed and analysed, along with previously collected data, using Google Maps (or Google Earth). Similarly, data from the web database can be requested and displayed on the mobile phone, again using Google Maps.

Tool Category: 
App resides and runs on a server
Key Features : 
  • GPS and Google Maps data plotting
  • Easy to share data with multiple researchers

 

Main Services: 
Voting, Data Collection, Surveys, and Polling
Tool Maturity: 
Currently deployed
Release Date: 
2009-09
Platforms: 
Android
Current Version: 
1
Program/Code Language: 
Java/Android
Javascript
PHP
Organizations Using the Tool: 
  • Imperial College London

 

Languages supported: 
English
Handsets/devices supported: 
Android devices
Reviews/Evaluations: 
EpiCollect Research Paper http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0006968
Is the Tool's Code Available?: 
Yes
Is an API available to interface with your tool?: 
Yes
Global Regions: 
Countries: 
Featured?: 
Yes

Mobile Myths and Reality: A New Series on Deconstructing Mobiles for Development

Posted by KatrinVerclas on Sep 28, 2009

Mobile tech as a tool for social development is makling the front pages in 2009. They are hyped as panacea for global issues such as rural health in developing countries, poverty alleviation, making rural markets more efficient, and activism. 

We have been working in this field since 2005, leading the industry analysis on mobiles for development and social change. While we agree that mobile phones are revolutionizing the developing world, we think it is time to take a very honest and realistic look at the promises of mobile tech for development and social change, and where these promises are falling short -- and of, course, why, and what to do about that.

Rip Van Winkle's Surprise: Critical Perspectives on Mobiles in Development and Social Change

Posted by admin on Sep 28, 2009

Essay by in response to A Dialogue on ICTs, Human Development, Growth, and Poverty Reduction, first published on Publius.cc

If we imagine Washington Irving's Rip Van Winkle falling asleep in a developing nation in 1998 and awaking today, it's likely that he'd be fascinated and surprised by mobile phones. When Rip went to sleep, only a few hundred million people had access to mobile phones, and most lived in wealthy nations. A decade later, the ITU sees 4.1 billion mobile phone accounts, two-thirds of them in the developing world. The changes brought by mobile phones are both subtle and omnipresent - mobile phone numbers painted above shop doors allow merchants to untether from their stalls; carpentry ads scrawled on road signs turn a craftsman with a phone into an independent, mobile business; secure money transfers from abroad pay the village school fees that grant a child an education.

The rise of the mobile phone has challenged many of the predictions about information in the developing world offered by information and communication technology for development (ICT4D) specialists. Instead of embracing community solutions that offered shared access to information, many poor people have been willing to pay large sums (as Steve Song and others have documented, sometimes more than 50% of their disposable income) for personal access to communication tools. Presented with a model that extends connectivity into some poor communities without government subsidy, often turning a profit, the development community is rightly looking for ways to build tools for economic and community development on top of these platforms.

While we are wise to embrace the successes of the mobile phone platform, we need to think carefully about the implications of a mobile-based communications future in the developing world. Much of the thinking about ICT4D has focused on the benefits of the internet, an open, decentralized platform that's different from mobile phone networks in critical ways. It's unclear that some of the emergent behaviors we've celebrated on the Internet can be easily replicated in a mobile-centric world.

Hispanic Broadband Access: Making the Most of the Mobile, Connected Future

Posted by AnneryanHeatwole on Sep 25, 2009
Hispanic Broadband Access: Making the Most of the Mobile, Connected Future data sheet 3000 Views
Author: 
The Hispanic Institute, Mobile Future
Publication Date: 
Sep 2009
Publication Type: 
Report/White paper
Abstract: 

As the U.S. develops a national broadband strategy, much is at stake for American consumers, the country’s economy, as well as future innovation and its many social benefits. Complex issues from infrastructure deployment to digital literacy to consumer-friendly tax reform all play into U.S. efforts to close the digital divide and usher in a new era of innovation and opportunity. Equally important to ensuring these benefits are shared throughout our society is a deeper understanding of the unique needs, challenges and connected behavior of diverse Americans.

This paper explores the broadband behavior, challenges and opportunities of the nation’s 48 million Hispanics. A better understanding of this community and its connectivity—increasingly defined by a strong preference for mobile broadband access—can help shape a successful national broadband strategy that spurs substantial new opportunities at the intersection of broadband, mobility and the Hispanic community.


W3C MobileOK Checker

Posted by PrabhasPokharel on Sep 22, 2009
W3C MobileOK Checker data sheet 6446 Views
Organization that developed the Tool: 
Main Contact: 
Dominique Hazael-Massieux
Problem or Need: 

All elements of regular html are not appropriate for mobile phone web browsers (which have small screens, hard input methods, and usually low bandwidth). This tool lets you check whether a site is appropriate to be viewed on mobile phones.

Main Contact Email : 
Brief Description: 

This checker performs various tests on a Web Page to determine its level of mobile-friendliness. The tests are defined in the mobileOK Basic Tests 1.0 specification. A Web Page is mobileOK when it passes all the tests. Please refer to the About page for more details.

Tool Category: 
App resides and runs on a server
Key Features : 

Checks whether your site is mobile ready; Given suggestions for improvement if not. Uses W3C's mobileOK Basic Tests 1.0 specification

Main Services: 
Other
Tool Maturity: 
Currently deployed
Platforms: 
All phones/Mobile Browser
Current Version: 
1.2
Program/Code Language: 
Java
Is the Tool's Code Available?: 
Yes
URL for license: 
http://dev.w3.org/cvsweb/2007/mobileok-ref/LICENSE.html?rev=1.1&content-type=text/x-cvsweb-markup
Is an API available to interface with your tool?: 
Yes

Prenatal Care Through SMS

Posted by CorinneRamey on Sep 22, 2009

In India, especially in rural areas, men are often in charge of the family mobile phone.  But Subhi Quaraishi, CEO of ZMQ Software Systems, thinks that phones are a great way to reach women as well.

"The goal of our program is to use technology to empower women," said Quaraishi, of ZMQ's new pilot program.

ZMQ is currently running a program to provide women with information on prenatal care via SMS. The messages, which are all in Hindi, contain information on vaccinations, exercise, diet, medication, and how to deal with emergencies that arrive during pregnancy. This is the only program of its kind in India, although other programs -- like a Grameen Bank sponsored program in Ghana -- also use SMS to give advice on prenatal care.

October Mobile Events Round-up

Posted by KatrinVerclas on Sep 21, 2009

Here are some mobile events for the month of October that we thought are noteworthy and of interest to the MobileActive.org community. If you know of others, please mail us at info at MobileActive dot org.

Tue Oct 13 – Wed Oct 14 : Mobile Web Africa, South Africa (Johannesburg)

The first Mobile Web Conference in Africa is a two-day event in Johannesburg that focuses on some of these key questions: How will the mobile industry evolve to a point where the vast majority of people have access to the mobile web and the content they want to view? How can societal and economic problems be tackled by the development of the capabilities of the mobile device?

Wed October 21- Sat Oct 24 : PopTech, United States (Maine)

PopTech explores major trends shaping our future, the social impact of new technologies, and new approaches to addressing the world’s most significant challenges.  Several PopTech Fellows are part of the MobileActive.org community, including Deb Levine from Isis.inc, a leader in using mobile phones for sexual health education.

The ICT4D 2.0 Manifesto: Where Next for ICTs and International Development?

Posted by AnneryanHeatwole on Sep 18, 2009
The ICT4D 2.0 Manifesto: Where Next for ICTs and International Development? data sheet 4543 Views
Author: 
Richard Heeks
Publication Date: 
Jan 2009
Publication Type: 
Report/White paper
Abstract: 

ICT4D – the application of information and communication technologies for international development – is moving to a new phase. This will require new technologies, new approaches to innovation and implementation, new intellectual perspectives and, above all, a new view of the world's poor. All these must be understood if we are to harness digital technologies in the service of some of our world's most pressing problems.

This paper explains the phase change – from "ICT4D 1.0" to "ICT4D 2.0" – and its implications. The background to these phases is reviewed, charting the logic and chronology of applying ICTs in developing countries. The implications of the phase change are then analysed.

First, in terms of new technology and application priorities. Then, in relation to new models of innovation we may need to embrace: from laboratory to collaborative to grassroots innovation. Next, in relation to new implementation models for funding, managing, and applying digital technology. Finally, the paper looks at necessary new worldviews to guide our thinking and our policies in this field; integrating perspectives from computer science, information systems and development studies. Additional commentaries and models provide a further set of rich insights into the future of ICT4D.


Mobile Phones in Africa: How Much Do We Really Know?

Posted by AnneryanHeatwole on Sep 17, 2009
Mobile Phones in Africa: How Much Do We Really Know? data sheet 6177 Views
Author: 
Jeffrey James, Mila Versteeg
Publication Date: 
Jan 2007
Publication Type: 
Journal article
Abstract: 

Mobile phones are a crucial mode of communication and welfare enhancement in poor countries, especially those lacking an infrastructure of fixed lines. In recent years much has been written about how mobile telephony in Africa is rapidly reducing the digital divide with developed countries. Yet, when one examines the evidence it is not at all clear what is really happening. In one country, Tanzania, for example, some observers point to the fact that 97% of the population lives under the mobile footprint, while others show that ownership is very limited. These extreme values prompted us to review the situation in Africa as a whole, in an effort to discover what is really going on.

Even though the article is from 2007, the content is still extremely relevant. The authors write: This paper accordingly seeks to clarify the conceptual confusion that underlies the grossly different estimates of the extent to which mobile telephony exists on the continent. To this end we employ a framework that distinguishes between mobile phone subscribers, mobile phone owners, mobile phone users, those who benefit from usage and those who have access to this technology. This classification, we feel, will provide the reader with a better understanding of the state of mobile telephony in Africa and will have important implications for the type of data that are needed, but at present are unavailable. The categories that are identified, moreover, help us better to understand different views as to the extent of the digital divide in mobile phones between Africa and the rest of the world."

 

 


When People, not Computers, Sort SMS Data

Posted by CorinneRamey on Sep 17, 2009

Currently, most SMS surveys have questions that ask people to respond to a menu of multiple choice answers.  But Textonic, an open-source tool that helps sort open-ended text responses, seeks to change that.

"I think it's potentially a major shift in terms of the way we do social research," said Thomas Robertson, one of the lead developers on the project.

Textonic, which has yet to be actually used, was developed as part of a graduate class taught by Clay Shirky in the Interactive Telecommunications Program at New York University. The tool is a way of connecting RapidSMS, the data collection platform used by UNICEF, with Amazon Mechanical Turk.

Mobilisr

Posted by PrabhasPokharel on Sep 15, 2009
Mobilisr data sheet 4637 Views
Organization that developed the Tool: 
Main Contact: 
Peter Benjamin
Problem or Need: 

Currently NGOs have to rely on sometimes-expensive private-sector suppliers of mobile services such as bulk SMS, USSD, etc. Mobilisr allows organisations to manage their own multi-channel mobile communications.

Main Contact Email : 
Brief Description: 

Mobilisr is an open source mobile messaging platform. It is a Web-based system that allows you to manage communications via mobile phone using a range of mobile technologies: broadcast SMS, interactive keyword SMS, SMS subscribe and unsubscribe, static USSD, and interactive USSD. Future releases will include interactive voice recording (IVR), location-based services, WAP and voicemail push (where a recorded voicemail is sent to people's phones).

Examples of how these can be used include: bulk SMSs sent to patients at an ARV clinic reminding them to take their medication; and interactive USSD used to gather patient feedback on service quality.

Mobilisr allows for tracking of 'campaigns', so you can monitor how many messages have been sent and to whom, which facilitates easier reporting.

Demo URL: http://www.cell-life.org.za/Mob2
username: demo
password: demo

Tool Category: 
App resides and runs on a server
Is a web-based application/web service
Key Features : 

Mobilisr contains functionality to:

  • Build Campaigns (Campaigns are collections of content and services)
  • Design and Manage Content intended for different mobile channels
    • Bulk SMS, SMS Keyword Response, Keyword-based (Un)Subscription
    • Building of and deploying of USSD services
    • Deploying of IVR / VoiceMail based technology (to be developed)
    • Location-based services (to be developed)
  • Capture data through these various channels
  • Manage database of users, messages, and create reports

More details here

Main Services: 
Bulk SMS
Premium SMS and Billing
USSD Services
Display tool in profile: 
Yes
mobilisr screenshot of home page
Tool Maturity: 
Currently deployed
Platforms: 
All phones -- SMS
All phones -- Voice
All phones -- USSD
All phones/Mobile Browser
Program/Code Language: 
Java
Organizations Using the Tool: 

Treatment Action Campaign, Soul City, Positive Muslims, HIVAN, Caris

Number of Current End Users: 
Under 100
Number of current beneficiaries: 
10,000-100,000
Support Forums: 
http://www.cell-life.org.za/Mob2/manual/Manual.pdf
Languages supported: 
English
Handsets/devices supported: 
Server can be deployed on a java-enabled system. Or web app can be used with Cell-Life support.
Is the Tool's Code Available?: 
Yes
Is an API available to interface with your tool?: 
Yes
Countries: 

CommCare

Posted by AnneryanHeatwole on Sep 14, 2009
CommCare data sheet 3443 Views
Organization that developed the Tool: 
Main Contact: 
Neal Lesh
Problem or Need: 

Community Health workers (CHWs) play a vital role in serving poor and rural populations. CHWs are typically in the best position to promote preventive care and convey important health information. CHWs can encourage prompt care-seeking behavior, and detect and refer those at risk for tuberculosis, malaria, and other important diseases. CHWs also have the potential to collect information that is needed at the national level about disease burden and barriers to adopting necessary health practices. CHWs, however, often receive relatively little medical training, have high turnover, and have limited opportunities to reinforce their knowledge once they begin working in the field. They typically lack effective tools required to maintain the longitudinal records required to provide truly effective care. Furthermore, CHWs are difficult to organize and manage for the very reason they are so effective: that they live in the community and only rarely have contact with their supervisors.

Dimagi and D-Tree international are leading CommCare, a mobile-phone based application enables community health workers (CWHs) to provide better, more efficient care while also enabling better supervision and coordination of community health programs

Main Contact Email : 
Brief Description: 

Dimagi and D-Tree international are leading CommCare, a mobile-phone based application enables community health workers (CWHs) to provide better, more efficient care while also enabling better supervision and coordination of community health programs. Each CHW will have a phone running the CommCare software that will assist them in managing household visits and planning their day. CommCare will collect and report data that will help monitor and evaluate community health programs themselves.

Tool Category: 
App resides and runs on a mobile phone
Is a web-based application/web service
Key Features : 

Modules:

  • Maternal Health
  • Safe Pregnancy
  • TB
  • Integrated Management of Childhood Illness
  • HIV

Technologies:

JavaRosa

RapidSMS

CommCareHQ

Main Services: 
Bulk SMS
Information Resources/Information Databases
Stand-alone Application
Tool Maturity: 
Currently deployed
Platforms: 
Java ME
All phones -- SMS
Program/Code Language: 
Java
Python
Organizations Using the Tool: 

 

  • Pathfinder
  • BRAC
  • Earth Institute/MVP
  • D-Tree International
  • Dimagi

 

Number of Current End Users: 
Under 100
Number of current beneficiaries: 
100-1,000
Languages supported: 
English, Swahili, Spanish
Is the Tool's Code Available?: 
Yes
Is an API available to interface with your tool?: 
No
Countries: 
Featured?: 
Yes

CS Pro Mobile

Posted by AnneryanHeatwole on Sep 14, 2009
CS Pro Mobile data sheet 5708 Views
Organization that developed the Tool: 
Main Contact: 
Guillermo Rojas
Problem or Need: 

With CS Pro Mobile, data can be captured directly into a computer-readable form rather than using paper questionnaires.

Main Contact Email : 
Brief Description: 

CS Pro Mobile is a census and survey processing system for capturing household and other survey data directly on PDAs.

Tool Category: 
App resides and runs on a server
Key Features : 
  • Handles complex surveys on PDAs
  • Multiple language support


 

Main Services: 
Voting, Data Collection, Surveys, and Polling
Tool Maturity: 
Currently deployed
Platforms: 
Windows Mobile
Current Version: 
4
Program/Code Language: 
Pocket PC and Microsoft Smartphone
Organizations Using the Tool: 

 

  • US Census Bureau

 

Number of Current End Users: 
Under 100
Number of current beneficiaries: 
Under 100
Languages supported: 
English
Handsets/devices supported: 
Dell Axim, HP 2795, HP iPaq 210-212, other Pocket PCs and Smartphones
Is the Tool's Code Available?: 
No
Is an API available to interface with your tool?: 
No
Countries: