To design better tech understand context Tania Douglas

This is an equipment graveyard.

It’s a typical final resting place

for medical equipment
from hospitals in Africa.

Now, why is this?

Most of the medical devices
used in Africa are imported,

and quite often, they’re not suitable
for local conditions.

They may require trained staff

that aren’t available to operate
and maintain and repair them;

they may not be able to withstand
high temperatures and humidity;

and they usually require a constant
and reliable supply of electricity.

An example of a medical device

that may have ended up
in an equipment graveyard at some point

is an ultrasound monitor
to track the heart rate of unborn babies.

This is the standard of care
in rich countries.

In low-resource settings,
the standard of care is often

a midwife listening
to the baby’s heart rate

through a horn.

Now, this approach has been around
for more than a century.

It’s very much dependent on the skill
and the experience of the midwife.

Two young inventors from Uganda

visited an antenatal clinic
at a local hospital a few years ago,

when they were students
in information technology.

They noticed that quite often,

the midwife was not able
to hear any heart rate

when trying to listen to it
through this horn.

So they invented their own
fetal heart rate monitor.

They adapted the horn
and connected it to a smartphone.

An app on the smartphone
records the heart rate, analyzes it

and provides the midwife
with a range of information

on the status of the baby.

These inventors –

(Applause)

are called Aaron Tushabe
and Joshua Okello.

Another inventor, Tendekayi Katsiga,

was working for an NGO in Botswana
that manufactured hearing aids.

Now, he noticed that
these hearing aids needed batteries

that needed replacement,

very often at a cost
that was not affordable

for most of the users that he knew.

In response, and being an engineer,
Tendekayi invented

a solar-powered battery charger
with rechargeable batteries,

that could be used in these hearing aids.

He cofounded a company called Deaftronics,

which now manufactures the Solar Ear,

which is a hearing aid powered
by his invention.

My colleague, Sudesh Sivarasu,
invented a smart glove

for people who have suffered from leprosy.

Even though their disease
may have been cured,

the resulting nerve damage
will have left many of them

without a sense of touch in their hands.

This puts them at risk of injury.

The glove has sensors
to detect temperature and pressure

and warn the user.

It effectively serves
as an artificial sense of touch

and prevents injury.

Sudesh invented this glove
after observing former leprosy patients

as they carried out
their day-to-day activities,

and he learned about the risks
and the hazards in their environment.

Now, the inventors that I’ve mentioned

integrated engineering with healthcare.

This is what biomedical engineers do.

At the University of Cape Town,

we run a course called
Health Innovation and Design.

It’s taken by many of our graduate
students in biomedical engineering.

The aim of the course
is to introduce these students

to the philosophy of the design world.

The students are encouraged
to engage with communities

as they search for solutions
to health-related problems.

One of the communities that we work with
is a group of elderly people

in Cape Town.

A recent class project had the task
of addressing hearing loss

in these elderly people.

The students, many of them
being engineers,

set out believing that they
would design a better hearing aid.

They spent time with the elderly,

chatted to their healthcare providers
and their caregivers.

They soon realized that, actually,
adequate hearing aids already existed,

but many of the elderly who needed them
and had access to them

didn’t have them.

And many of those who had hearing aids

wouldn’t wear them.

The students realized

that many of these elderly people
were in denial of their hearing loss.

There’s a stigma attached
to wearing a hearing aid.

They also discovered that the environment
in which these elderly people lived

did not accommodate their hearing loss.

For example, their homes
and their community center

were filled with echoes
that interfered with their hearing.

So instead of developing and designing
a new and better hearing aid,

the students did an audit
of the environment,

with a view to improving the acoustics.

They also devised a campaign
to raise awareness of hearing loss

and to counter the stigma
attached to wearing a hearing aid.

Now, this often happens
when one pays attention to the user –

in this case, the elderly –

and their needs and their context.

One often has to move away
from the focus of technology

and reformulate the problem.

This approach to understanding a problem
through listening and engaging

is not new,

but it often isn’t followed by engineers,

who are intent on developing technology.

One of our students has a background
in software engineering.

He had often created products for clients

that the client ultimately did not like.

When a client would reject a product,

it was common at his company

to proclaim that the client
just didn’t know what they wanted.

Having completed the course,
the student fed back to us

that he now realized
that it was he who hadn’t understood

what the client wanted.

Another student gave us feedback

that she had learned
to design with empathy,

as opposed to designing for functionality,

which is what her engineering
education had taught her.

So what all of this illustrates is that
we’re often blinded to real needs

in our pursuit of technology.

But we need technology.

We need hearing aids.
We need fetal heart rate monitors.

So how do we create more medical device
success stories from Africa?

How do we create more inventors,

rather than relying on
a few exceptional individuals

who are able to perceive real needs

and respond in ways that work?

Well, we focus on needs
and people and context.

“But this is obvious,” you might say,

“Of course context is important.”

But Africa is a diverse continent,

with vast disparities in health and wealth
and income and education.

If we assume that our engineers
and inventors already know enough

about the different African contexts

to be able to solve the problems
of our different communities

and our most marginalized communities,

then we might get it wrong.

But then, if we on the African continent

don’t necessarily know enough about it,

then perhaps anybody with the right level
of skill and commitment could fly in,

spend some time listening and engaging

and fly out knowing enough
to invent for Africa.

But understanding context is not about
a superficial interaction.

It’s about deep engagement

and an immersion in the realities
and the complexities of our context.

And we in Africa are already immersed.

We already have a strong and rich
base of knowledge

from which to start finding solutions
to our own problems.

So let’s not rely too much on others

when we live on a continent
that is filled with untapped talent.

Thank you.

(Applause)