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14.06.2018 Health

Mobile Applications For Cervical Cancer

By GNA
Mobile Applications For Cervical Cancer
14.06.2018 LISTEN

Professor Kwabena Frimpong-Boateng, Minister of Environment Science, Technology and Innovation has unveiled three mobile applications software on cervical cancer prevention and management to aid healthcare delivery in the country.

They are: the Cervical Cancer Prevention Training Centre (CCPTC) Mobile Colposcopy app, CCPTC Cervical Ablative Treatment app, and CCPTC Colposcopy Report Sheet app.

Prof Frimpong-Boateng, speaking at the launch at the Battor Catholic Hospital in the North Tongu district of the Volta Region on Wednesday, noted that the application would equip healthcare professionals with the necessary technology to comprehensively detect, analyze and treat cervical cancer.

The Minister stated that the world thrived and was being driven by innovation, knowledge and science, hence, the need to embrace technological advancement.

While praising the team from Bottor CCPTC for developing the applications, he urged the youth especially health workers to strive hard to unearth their talents and help provide solutions to the many challenges facing the health sector.

'Just like the innovators who have come up with this application, each and everyone has a unique gift from God that no one has. To explain this, look at how officers who found themselves in an area ranked as poor districts, but they have been able to develop this to serve the world,' he added.

A team from CCPTC led by Dr Kofi Effah and Dr David Olayiwola Olatayo jointly developed the innovative app that could be currently found on Google play store.

Dr Olatayo explained that the CCPTC Mobile Colposcopy app was designed for professionals who used mobile colposcope for screening through enhanced visual inspections with acetic acid.

He said the application, through the use of artificial intelligent was able to indicate whether a patient was qualified for screening with mobile colpscope and further assessed for visibility of squamo columnar junction.

The second application CCPTC Cervical Ablative Treatment app, he stated had been devised for health professionals to aid the prescription of management and avoid errors.

Dr Olatayo remarked that the third application, which was based on the 2011 International Federation of Cervical Pathology and Colposcopy nomenclature, takes records in a telemedicine and capture images of the cervix that would be saved in a database.

'This app makes it possible for trainers to supervise their trainers in any part of the world. It has a self-reliant version in which the health professional can independently record, analyse and manage their colposcopic findings,' he added.

Dr Kofi Effah, Director of CCPTC explained that the Centre had over the years embarked on many innovations including community-based cervical cancer screening programme through the Community-based Health Planning Services (CHPS) with self-sampling and decentralized test, which some 2000 women benefited.

Through the support of donors, he disclosed that the Centre was the only facility in the country that had modern equipment to test for the high-risk or carcinogenic types that were most likely to cause cervical cancer by looking for pieces of their DNA in cervical cells at a subsidised cost of GH¢75.00.

He added that the acquisition of thermal coagulator through crowd funding and other philanthropic had help treat cervical pre-cancer in remote communities.

The Centre, had so far trained 34 health workers throughout the country to be able to detect, analyse and manage cervical cancer.

Dr Gloria Quansah-Asare, Deputy Director-General of Ghana Health Service (GHS) said the various interventions were in line with the GHS plans to improve the health service of the country.

She praised the hospital for attaining such a feat, adding, the cervical cancer had been captured and categorised as one of the serious health issues in the country.

Dr Quansah-Asare said there had been recommendations that the levels of care needed to be done not only at the tertiary but the community level.

'At the level, we are moving through supporting CHPS to provide universal care and expand services that will enable the country achieve its healthcare global targets.

She said the GHS would sponsor some nurses to be trained in the detection, analyse and management of cervical cancer.

GNA
By Yaw Ansah, GNA

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