The purpose of this paper was to identify key participants who will participate in transactions carried out in the ecosystem for the Namibian context. This is to identify and describe specific professionals as well as their role in the ecosystem, hence, contributing to the empirical research on participants of a Digital Health Innovation Ecosystem. Another significant contribution of this paper is the identification of the benefits, challenges and presentation of guidelines for implementing a Digital Health Innovation Ecosystem for the Namibian context which would enable the actual implementation of the ecosystem. This paper also supports the strengthening of the MDGs 4,5 and 6 specifically through the Digital Health Innovation Ecosystem. The remainder of this paper is structured as follows; section 2 presents the literature review of Digital Health Innovation Ecosystems. Section 3 describes the research methodology. Section 4 presents the results of the study. Discussions, as well as the guidelines with approaches for implementing a Digital Health Innovation Ecosystem for the Namibian context,, are presented in Section 5. Conclusions are made in Section 6.
Reference:
Iyawa, G.E., Herselman, M.E. and Botha, A. 2019. Digital health innovation ecosystems: Identifying key participants, benefits, challenges and guidelines for the Namibian context. International Journal of Reliable and Quality E-Healthcare, vol. 8(2): 14pp
Iyawa, G., Herselman, M. E., & Botha, A. (2019). Digital health innovation ecosystems: Identifying key participants, benefits, challenges and guidelines for the Namibian context. http://hdl.handle.net/10204/10850
Iyawa, GE, Martha E Herselman, and Adèle Botha "Digital health innovation ecosystems: Identifying key participants, benefits, challenges and guidelines for the Namibian context." (2019) http://hdl.handle.net/10204/10850
Iyawa G, Herselman ME, Botha A. Digital health innovation ecosystems: Identifying key participants, benefits, challenges and guidelines for the Namibian context. 2019; http://hdl.handle.net/10204/10850.
Copyright: 2019 IGI. Due to copyright restrictions, the attached PDF file contains the pre-print version of the published item. For access to the published version, please consult the publisher's website.