Vodacom Tanzania Foundation has launched a mobile
maternity ‘m-mama’ service to provide emergency transport for pregnant and
postpartum women.
Supported by Vodacom Foundation, the new
service according to Vodacome Tanzania Foundation in a statement, will now be
scaled up from one Tanzanian region to cover more than 50% of the national
population across 15 regions.
Starting
from 2022, the expanded m-mama programme in Tanzania is expected to transport
more than 300,000 women, empower more than 1,400 community transport drivers, and could save more than 9,000 lives.
The
new programme has been developed by Vodacom Tanzania Foundation, Vodafone
Foundation and the government of The United Republic of Tanzania.
With
full government endorsement, both Foundations have committed to invest
US$10million over six years to roll out the programme, guided by a steering
committee from Tanzania’s Ministry of Health and public health delivery agency
PO-RALG. Over the next six years, the Government will increase its funding and
the programme will be fully integrated into the healthcare system by
2027.
At
an event to launch the new programme, Vodacom Group CEO Shameel Joosub said:
“At Vodacom our purpose is to build better futures and create productive
societies. Core to this is the belief that technology must help bridge divides
and improve equitable access to services. We believe that technology coupled
with the country’s enabling environment and political will - has the potential to
support African nations realize transformation in healthcare, agriculture,
education, financial services and other priority sectors.”
Vodacom
Tanzania’s Managing Director, Sitholizwe Mdlalose confirmed: “Too many pregnant
women, women in childbirth and new-borns die each year form largely preventable
causes. For nine years, we have been working with the Government to
develop a practical, sustainable and scalable solution to reduce maternal and
new-born deaths in the country. We have built a system that strengthens health
care delivery and connects the community and lower-level health facilities to
responsive emergency transport.”
Andrew
Dunnett, Vodafone Foundation Director, said: “This simple platform has enabled
over 12,000 women and babies in one region to access emergency medical
care. Over 200 community drivers have enabled this urgent transport for
moments where an ambulance is not immediately available. Now with the support
of the Tanzanian government, the m-mama programme will be integrated as a
Government-backed service, supplementing the ambulance service that will
provide much-needed emergency transport for more than half of the population of
the country. Our ambition in time is to expand this platform further to
other countries where a simple community driver system platform, supplementing
the ambulance service can save lives.”