Striata - Command Center for predictive distribution
Striata is central intelligence for the distribution of health goods and services. Striata has three core pillars: predicting who will show up for care and who won’t; predicting what will be used at each facility; predicting the capacity and capability of each health point and the system as a whole.
Benjamin Fels is the CEO of Macro-Eyes. Benjamin leads a global team and the global effort to make the delivery of healthcare predictive.
- Recover (Improve health & economic system resilience), such as: Best protective interventions, especially for vulnerable populations, Avoid/mitigate negative second-order consequences, Integrate true costs of pandemic risk into economic systems
COVID vaccination efforts have been largely focused on procuring vaccines and organizing “hard” infrastructure – planes, trucks, refrigerators. The shortcomings of active vaccination programs highlight the need for a focus on “soft” infrastructure: intelligence, forecasting, personnel, and processes.
The soft infrastructure that supports current immunization efforts (and healthcare delivery writ large) is designed to document what has happened. It is transactional. This has its place, but it is not transformational and will not keep pace with the need of COVID response or fast sweeping health concerns of the future. Systems that describe yesterday are not as useful as systems that indicate what will happen next.
To date, vaccine allocation has resulted in dramatic inequities in vaccine coverage, unacceptable vaccine wastage, and stalled progress toward vaccinating priority populations. The process will only get more challenging. To date, countries have sought to vaccinate captive, accessible populations. Hourly laborers, those unaccustomed to seeking care, the hesitant, and the remote in low income communicates will create a challenge for which we require predictive visibility at scale.
Striata serves decision makers in governments [today: Nigeria, Mozambique, Tanzania, Sierra Leone, California] and organizations that support equitable healthcare delivery [Direct Relief, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation].
We have formed working groups active around the world that integrate multi-dimensional expertise to drive impact and to drive adoption and use of the insights. Our technical working groups include leaders from the Ministry of Health and Sanitation of Sierra Leone, DSTI, and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and experts in AI from MIT, Imperial and Stanford.
The current approach for understanding the state of each health facility – and assessing readiness to deliver care - is the WHO SARA survey or similar World Bank frameworks. The SARA survey is resource intensive and organizationally intense: ~$1M and 9-12 months to create a static snapshot that is very often out of date by the time the data is published and accessible. This is the reason countries often only undergo the process every three to five years.
Today, health systems know patients won’t show up, but they don’t know who is at greatest risk, so they don’t engage the right people – meanwhile people who need care drop out of the system unengaged.
- Scale: A sustainable project or enterprise working in several contexts, communities or countries that is looking to scale significantly, focusing on increased efficiency
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