Start up your APP China – Africa Artificial Intelligence?

For bloggers, agents, collaborators about China – Africa or USA – Africa AI.

A challenge to manage  China – Africa or Latin America FIR?

virtually due to our crossing system in order to make money together with us.

For example choose niches as Beijing – Nigeria AI,  USA – Ethiopia IoT, China – South Africa JV IIoT, Tanzania – California AI Apps, China – Angola AI….Etc

Good ideas abou Industry 4.0 (specially in AI, Robotics, and IoT via APPS) for Africa? Any Project for your African country in mind? Your ideas means money in Sylodium.

contacts us here info@sylodium.com

For companies and institutions in China - Africa or USA – Africa FIR.

Our logical business system, allows you to segment your target markets to be seen, and dominate the bilateral trade niches you choose

For ex.:  www.ChinaAfrica.mobi  www.USAAfrica.biz etc

are just the starting point, as our URLs, metas and contents do the rest, due to all of them are well ordered in the real way to be the unique platform that represent (and reproduce) the reality of international business in Internet.

Bring your proposals to life

 

HOW AI CAN HELP AFRICA GET UNIVERSAL HEALTH CARE BEFORE AMERICA

New from NewsWeek.com

While American politicians quarrel over the Affordable Care Act, the United States—one of the few industrialized countries without universal health care—still spends twice as much per person per year on health expenses as the U.K. and Canada.

For all the debates over Obamacare, however, America boasts 38 MRI machines per one million people: Nigeria, a country of 180 million people, has only four. Across Africa, the ratio of doctors to patients is painfully low. The continent accounts for 25 percent of global disease cases, but has only 2-3 percent of the doctors in the world.

With 80 percent of doctors in countries like Nigeria seeking work abroad and limited access to clinics in remote and rural areas, the service gap across sub-Saharan Africa is wide. Almost one in two Africans lack access to modern health services—a figure expected to rise as the region’s population doubles by 2050.

Africa is a continent in need of universal health care. Efforts to increase coverage are underway: From Rwanda to South Africa, telemedicine and artificial intelligence have enabled health tech platforms to emerge, and allowed doctors to treat patients in under-resourced areas remotely, efficiently, and cheaply via mobile devices. Given increasing mobile penetration, low digitization costs, and few policy barriers, African markets are poised to use AI to leapfrog traditional health care infrastructure and achieve economically viable universal health coverage.

Despite a population of 1.2 billion spread across 54 countries, Africa is getting more and more interconnected. With prices falling to as little as $100, smartphone penetration more than doubled between 2014 and 2016. By 2020, smartphone adoption on the continent is expected to pass 50 percent—just shy of the global average.

. This future is much closer than most think. Technology is continually developing and this at an ever-increasing faster pace. We as a nation cannot afford to be left behind, “Victor Marques, Country Manager of Omron South Africa notes.

Change in working conditions  

South African industry needs to find ways of adapting and using the technologies driving the so-called Fourth IndustrialRevolution (or Industry 4.0) to remain globally competitive, yet maintain and create jobs in a high-unemployment environment.

“Therefore, education remains key as does a rapidly accelerated installation of infrastructure such as Fibre country wide and in all communities coupled with cost effective access to such infrastructure. We in Africa are presented with unique challenges and opportunities. For sure our creative think tanks will have to come up with innovative solutions to fully utilise the opportunities that Industry 4.0 presents and how best to leverage these ideas to the benefit of our people.”

Victor Marques concluded by saying that we as South Africans need to start at the grass roots, our schools helping to foster an interest in the sciences at primary and secondary level will go a long way.

 

Adebayo Alonge is a Nigerian entrepreneur and the co-founder of RxAll, an AI platform for pharmaceutical authentication and deliveries.

Other news from Reasonable technologies