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A review of teleradiology in Africa – Towards mobile teleradiology in Nigeria

eHealth is promoted as a means to strengthen health systems and facilitate universal health coverage. Sub-components (e.g. telehealth, telemedicine, mhealth) are seen as mitigators of healthcare provider shortages and poor rural and remote access. Teleradiology (including mobile teleradiology), wide...

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Autores principales: Tahir, Mohammed Y., Mars, Maurice, Scott, Richard E.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: AOSIS 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8832073/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35169498
http://dx.doi.org/10.4102/sajr.v26i1.2257
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author Tahir, Mohammed Y.
Mars, Maurice
Scott, Richard E.
author_facet Tahir, Mohammed Y.
Mars, Maurice
Scott, Richard E.
author_sort Tahir, Mohammed Y.
collection PubMed
description eHealth is promoted as a means to strengthen health systems and facilitate universal health coverage. Sub-components (e.g. telehealth, telemedicine, mhealth) are seen as mitigators of healthcare provider shortages and poor rural and remote access. Teleradiology (including mobile teleradiology), widespread in developed nations, is uncommon in developing nations. Decision- and policy-makers require evidence to inform their decisions regarding implementation of mobile teleradiology in Nigeria and other sub-Saharan countries. To gather evidence, Scopus and PubMed were searched using defined search strings (September 2020). Duplicates were removed, and titles and abstracts reviewed using specified selection criteria. Full-text papers of selected resources were retrieved and reviewed against the criteria. Insight from included studies was charted for eight a priori categories of information: needs assessment, implementation, connectivity, evaluation, costing, image display, image capture and concordance. Fifty-seven articles were identified, duplicates removed and titles and abstracts of remaining articles reviewed against study criteria. Twenty-six papers remained. After review of full-texts, ten met the study criteria. These were summarised, and key insights for the eight categories were charted. Few papers have been published on teleradiology in sub-Saharan Africa. Teleradiology, including mobile teleradiology, is feasible in sub-Saharan Africa for routine X-ray support of patients and healthcare providers in rural and remote locations. Former technical issues (image quality, transmission speed, image compression) have been largely obviated through the high-speed, high-resolution digital imaging and network transmission capabilities of contemporary smartphones and mobile networks, where accessible. Comprehensive studies within the region are needed to guide the widespread introduction of mobile teleradiology.
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spelling pubmed-88320732022-02-14 A review of teleradiology in Africa – Towards mobile teleradiology in Nigeria Tahir, Mohammed Y. Mars, Maurice Scott, Richard E. SA J Radiol Review Article eHealth is promoted as a means to strengthen health systems and facilitate universal health coverage. Sub-components (e.g. telehealth, telemedicine, mhealth) are seen as mitigators of healthcare provider shortages and poor rural and remote access. Teleradiology (including mobile teleradiology), widespread in developed nations, is uncommon in developing nations. Decision- and policy-makers require evidence to inform their decisions regarding implementation of mobile teleradiology in Nigeria and other sub-Saharan countries. To gather evidence, Scopus and PubMed were searched using defined search strings (September 2020). Duplicates were removed, and titles and abstracts reviewed using specified selection criteria. Full-text papers of selected resources were retrieved and reviewed against the criteria. Insight from included studies was charted for eight a priori categories of information: needs assessment, implementation, connectivity, evaluation, costing, image display, image capture and concordance. Fifty-seven articles were identified, duplicates removed and titles and abstracts of remaining articles reviewed against study criteria. Twenty-six papers remained. After review of full-texts, ten met the study criteria. These were summarised, and key insights for the eight categories were charted. Few papers have been published on teleradiology in sub-Saharan Africa. Teleradiology, including mobile teleradiology, is feasible in sub-Saharan Africa for routine X-ray support of patients and healthcare providers in rural and remote locations. Former technical issues (image quality, transmission speed, image compression) have been largely obviated through the high-speed, high-resolution digital imaging and network transmission capabilities of contemporary smartphones and mobile networks, where accessible. Comprehensive studies within the region are needed to guide the widespread introduction of mobile teleradiology. AOSIS 2022-01-11 /pmc/articles/PMC8832073/ /pubmed/35169498 http://dx.doi.org/10.4102/sajr.v26i1.2257 Text en © 2022. The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee: AOSIS. This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution License.
spellingShingle Review Article
Tahir, Mohammed Y.
Mars, Maurice
Scott, Richard E.
A review of teleradiology in Africa – Towards mobile teleradiology in Nigeria
title A review of teleradiology in Africa – Towards mobile teleradiology in Nigeria
title_full A review of teleradiology in Africa – Towards mobile teleradiology in Nigeria
title_fullStr A review of teleradiology in Africa – Towards mobile teleradiology in Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed A review of teleradiology in Africa – Towards mobile teleradiology in Nigeria
title_short A review of teleradiology in Africa – Towards mobile teleradiology in Nigeria
title_sort review of teleradiology in africa – towards mobile teleradiology in nigeria
topic Review Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8832073/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35169498
http://dx.doi.org/10.4102/sajr.v26i1.2257
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