TrueSpec Africa
Franck Verzefé is a pharmacist who is fighting falsified medicine in Africa. He is the inventor of TrueSpec, a portable device that uses artificial intelligence to allow hospitals, pharmacies, pharmaceutical laboratories and quality control centers to determine whether or not a drug is genuine in less than 20 seconds, anytime and anywhere in both cities and villages by analyzing the chemical composition of drugs. Franck Verzefé is a member of UN/International Telecommunication Union and the World Health Organization’s Focus Group on Artificial Intelligence for Health (AI4H). At AI4H Franck leads the topic group Artificial intelligence for detection of falsified Medicine; which is responsible for the development of global standard for evaluation and benchmarking of AI pharmaceutical systems. Franck was named among the top 5 African social entrepreneurs in 2017 by the African Youth Award. He was also recently ranked by WHO among the top 30 African innovators.
42% of falsified drugs in the World are found in Africa where up to 169,000 children die every year from pneumonia and an estimated 116,000 people die annually from malaria due to falsified drugs.
Existing drug testing devices are offered at a price African countries can’t afford. With a price tag in the neighborhood of 60.000 € per device, many healthcare facilities are unable to get the technology to stop counterfeited medicine and people are afraid to report fake drug traffickers.
That is why I created a device and a platform. A device is call TrueSpec and allow health walkers to know if their medicines are genuine or fake in less than 20s and also a platform to give the possibility to anyone to denounce and tell their own story with fake medicines
The presence of substandard and falsified medical products in countries and their use by patients threatens to undermine progress towards meeting the Sustainable Development Goals. Such products may be of poor quality, unsafe or ineffective, threatening the health of those that take them.
In Africa, A surge in falsified and poor quality medicines means that 250 000 children a year are thought to die after receiving shoddy or outright fake drugs intended to treat malaria and pneumonia alone.
Illegal trade takes places around the world. The world health Organization (WHO) estimates that counterfeit medicines worth 73 billion euros trades annually. The WHO estimates that in some countries in Africa more than 30 percent of medicine in circulation are fakes and in others countries without an appropriate regulation up to 50 percent of medicines are falsified.
Anything that makes money will be counterfeited . this affects patented medications as well as generics. Expensive, prescription drugs, such as those used in AIDS or cancer therapy, are specially lucrative for dubious businesses. Antibiotics, antimalarial are the most commonly counterfeited drugs, particularly in low-income nations where medicines are prohibitively expensive for many people.
True-Spec Africa, is the company that gives the opportunity for everyone to have access to genuine medicine. TrueSpec Africa has developed a portable device that uses artificial intelligence to allow hospitals, pharmacies, pharmaceutical laboratories and quality control centers to determine whether or not a drug is genuine in less than 10 seconds anytime and anywhere in the world. TrueSpec Africa is also a a platform that give the possibility to anyone to denounce and tell their own story with fake medicines
The falsification of medicines affects everyone, especially disadvantaged populations such as low-income populations and refugees living in precarious conditions. tens of thousands dying from $30 billion fake drugs.
One in 10 drugs sold in developing countries is fake or substandard, leading to tens of thousands of deaths, many of them of African children given ineffective treatments for pneumonia and malaria said WHO.
the first users of our analysis devices are healthcare professionals, hospitals, pharmacy, drug control center but also customs for monitoring incoming drugs and the first users of our awareness and denunciation platform are ordinary citizens who want things to change and with each alert given, the relevant organization is alarmed
- Elevating issues and their projects by building awareness and driving action to solve the most difficult problems of our world
Denounce and raise awareness among the population of the danger of fake medicines is a constant battle, this goes through three stages, awareness, a practical action which is technological and a participatory inclusion of the population in improving their own health by denouncing or sharing their personal story
when I was student i wondered how people could know for sure if a drug is genuine or falsified.
After this question, i began doing research on the topic and realized that the problem of falsified and substandard drugs was killing thousands of Africans annually and that drug testing devices, that could solve the problem, were too expensive; ranging between $ 40 000 - $ 60 000 a device at the time.
i then decided to develop a means to do molecular analysis to help solve the problem. Knowing that my research would cost me a lot of money, i looked for a lowhanging-fruit opportunity in my city that could bring me some money that i could use to fund my research. i noted the challenges when it comes to accessing real estate and decided to provide a solution by creating a real estate agency named Immo Bethel. In six months, i earned nearly $57 000.
i then built a professional team and started TrueSpec Africa. Today TrueSpec Africa develops an artificial intelligence, which coupled with a spectrometry device, enables identification of the chemical composition of drugs and structuring the data obtained in less than 20 seconds.
Imagine a poor African mother who gives up food for herself so that she can afford essential medicine for her desperately ill child. Now imagine that for her sacrifice, she winds up instead with a fake medicine. Unaware that she is a victim of criminal scam, she gives the fake medicine to her child, only to watch her child suffer or even die as a result.
This is a nightmare scene that’s repeated thousands of times every year across Africa because of a multi-billion-dollar global trade in falsified medicines.
It is impossible for me to accept the idea that the drugs we buy are responsible for the deterioration of our health. Faced with this situation, it was impossible for me to sit idly by. I am convinced that our action will allow the population to better protect themselves. To invest fully in the development of Africa. The whole international community must mobilize, families in Africa deserve it.
I am a pharmacist, since 2014 I have worked to improve the health of populations in Africa. My research in the area of falsified and substandard medicine lead me to develop a low-cost portable device that can analyze and detect falsified medicine in less than 10 seconds. In 2017, I founded TrueSpec Africa, a company which mission is to help health professionals restore hope and save lives by facilitating the analysis of drugs through new technologies.
Our goal is to curb counterfeited medicine use by analysis and detection. We are able to do this by providing a platform for drug control.
My team and I are running a platform called the TrueSpec Africa ambassadors, which aims to teach the public about the dangers of falsifying drugs and the consequences to public health. This platform also gives the opportunity to all people, no matter where they reside, to denounce the presence of falsifying drugs and/or to support our cause by sharing their own story.
I am currently working with the WHO on the development of new drug testing technologies for LMICs, and I have been ranked by the WHO in the top 30 African innovators in the field of health.
I am a member of the ITU-WHO FGAI4H which is the ITU / WHO Focus Group on artificial intelligence for health (FG-AI4H) who works in partnership with the World Health Organization (WHO) to establish a standardized assessment framework for the evaluation of AI-based methods for health, diagnosis, triage or treatment decisions.
An expert estimates that a $1000 investment in counterfeit drugs can result in a $20,000 return, which is 10 times the profit rate of trafficking heroin. For example, selling counterfeit sildenafil “can be as much as 2000 times more profitable” than selling cocaine.
Trafficking in fake medicines is more dangerous than trafficking in drugs. My fight has already assaulted me with an armed attack because traffickers have power and are sometimes high-ranking officials in the administration.
To face this problem, we have worked hard to gain credibility on the international level in order to create partnerships with large Organizations such as the WHO, the international telecommunication union that can support us and ensure implementation and continuity of our work in the African region.
I am convinced that our action will allow the population to be better protected from the counterfeit drugs. To invest fully in the development of Africa and offer it the bright future to which the continent is promised; the whole international community must mobilize. Families in Africa deserve it.
Thanks to my commitment in the field of health, I was also ranked by Avance Media in Africa, in the top 50 most influential young Cameroonians and the first in the category of science and technology.
I have been distinguished by several awards:
1. I was named among the top 5 African social entrepreneurs in 2017 by the African Youth Award.
2. I was ranked by the African Entrepreneurship Award as part of the top 50 African entrepreneurs creating jobs and having a huge impact on the continent
3. I was also named by TedX Johanesburg as part of the top 100 innovators of the 100th millennium.
4. Lastly, I was recently ranked by the WHO as among the top 30 African innovators
- For-profit, including B-Corp or similar models
No