3 days ago
Dr. Funmi Adewara’s journey to revolutionize healthcare in Africa began with a deeply personal experience during her childhood in northern Nigeria. After suffering a severe hand injury that required multiple surgeries, she spent countless hours in overcrowded hospital waiting rooms, observing the strain on doctors and the inadequacies of the healthcare system.
I remember watching doctors stretched thin, unable to meet the needs of so many patients, she recalls. These formative experiences, coupled with her upbringing in a household where her mother worked as a nurse, shaped her early understanding of the challenges facing healthcare delivery in Nigeria. Through her mother’s stories, Adewara grew acutely aware of the systemic barriers preventing access to quality medical care.
I knew early on that healthcare wasn’t a privilege—it was a necessity, she explains. I wanted to be part of changing the system.
Driven by this passion, Adewara pursued a career in medicine, eventually training as a physician. She later moved to the United Kingdom, where she spent 15 years working with the National Health Service (NHS). These years not only honed her clinical expertise but also deepened her resolve to address the healthcare disparities she had witnessed in Africa.
In 2017, Adewara founded Mobihealth, a groundbreaking telemedicine platform designed to bridge the gap in healthcare access across Nigeria and beyond. The platform connects patients to doctors and healthcare professionals, providing consultations, diagnoses, and follow-up care via digital technology. This innovative approach reduces the need for physical travel to medical facilities, a critical solution for rural and underserved communities.
Since its inception, Mobihealth has transformed thousands of lives, offering timely medical intervention and empowering patients with access to quality care. Adewara’s initiative has been particularly impactful in addressing issues like long waiting times, shortages of healthcare professionals, and the geographic barriers that hinder access to specialized care.
Her work represents a significant step toward addressing systemic healthcare challenges in Africa, leveraging technology to create a more equitable and efficient system. “Healthcare should be accessible to all, regardless of location or circumstance,” Adewara affirms. Through Mobihealth, she is making that vision a reality, one patient at a time.
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