Wheels for life
Every 2 minutes a mother in Kenya dies in child birth, many others suffer pregnancy related complications. This can be prevented by women gaining quality health care at the right time and a component of that is actually reaching the hospital facility in time.
Wheels for life seeks to have women reach out via mobile phone through a toll free number to reach a doctor, who triages, and then dispatches a vehicle either a taxi or ambulance using a mobile application. The patient is then picked from home and transported to the hospital in under 30 minutes.
This solution could see the reduction in time taken for a decision to be made to reach hospital and the time taken to actually access a facility thereby reducing first and second delay in accessing health care. This would thus significantly reduce maternal morbidity and mortality and help attain universal health care.
Maternal mortality is one of the biggest challenges in maternal health care. World Health Organization by 2017 estimated that approximately 819 women die daily during delivery. Kenya stands at 362 deaths per 100,000 live births. Maternal deaths could be prevented if the three-delay model outlined by Thaddeus and Maine were addressed. These delays have been identified as delays in (i) decision to access care, (ii) the identification of- and transport to- a medical facility, delay in receiving quality healthcare.
Another model that has been shown to improve pregnancy outcomes is the provision of delivery under a skilled health personnel which reduces risk of complications.
While Kenya has ensured free antenatal and delivery service in public hospitals, minimal measures have been outlined to reduce the second delay which is the access to health care. Many women currently rely on public transport to hospitals in case of obstetrics emergency or labour. COVID-19 pandemic and the measures put in place to prevent spread in the country including curfew revealed the severity of this problem. Pregnant women were crippled with anxiety and lack of transport especially at night resulted in a significant rise in home delivery, neonatal death and maternal morbidity and even death.
Wheels for life presents as a solution to this problem by providing prompt triage and possible diagnosis through telemedicine and fast dispatch of emergency transport either by taxi or ambulance dependent on urgency by use of a mobile application.
The patients access the intervention through a toll free number, 1196, known to public (through social media and community health workers) and are immediately transferred to the doctor on call.
The doctor then will triage the patient and give either advice or dispatch a vehicle dependent on urgency. The taxi service uses a mobile application which the doctor inputs the location of the patient and the contacts and both the driver and patient get details of each other as text message. The driver then picks the patient from home and takes them to the nearest hospital or hospital of choice.
The ambulance also uses a system that identifies the nearest ambulance to the patient and dispatches it which then transfers to the hospital that can that level of emergency (based on triage).
A report is given to the doctor once the patient is admitted at a facility.
Our solution serves all women across the country who are pregnant and in need of consultation especially during curfew hours. It fills the gap filled by lack of access to hospital and ensures that women can still gain medical advice and reach hospital in case of need of specialised care.
Of key interest are women of low social economic status who even without curfew are unable to reach hospital due to financial constraints or vulnerability in the community (single mothers alone in labour) and long distances to hospitals.
We seek to ensure that access to hospital is not an additional stress factor to women in labour or undergoing any emergency. That using their mobile phones they can easily gain not on medical care but also be taken from home to hospitals and at little or no cost.
Women who receive the service are called in under 2 weeks for a qualitative review that then shapes the intervention and causes it to evolve to meet women's needs at various capacities. The feedback mechanism has enabled us to increase vehicles in more target areas, improve communication, increase driver remuneration to ensure women gain quality access and feel safer in the process.
- Expand access to high-quality, affordable care for women, new mothers, and newborns
Wheels for life as a solution aligns with the challenge as it directly impacts maternal and newborn health care and seeks to ensure that women have timely access to quality health care.
Through telemedicine, it ensures a woman has medical and emotional support by calling the toll free number and gaining free access to doctors for advice.
It is a technology based solution as it uses a mobile application to gain access to the taxi drivers and connect them with the hospitals. The ambulance also uses flyer technology to identify the nearest ambulance and track it to the hospital.
- Pilot: An organization deploying a tested product, service, or business model in at least one community

Founder
Global Advisor, Health and Nutrition