Mobilk - Students from around the world battled it out at the Qtel Group-sponsored GSMA Mobile Health Summit, which took place in South Africa and ended 1 June, in a competition designed to create the next wave of mobile applications capable of saving and improving lives.
Qtel Group, with its vision of ‘enriching people’s lives’, was a major participant in the mHealth event, as the company is widely-viewed by the industry to be a leader in the provision of these advanced mobile technology driven services.
Invited to speak at the event’s prestigious thought-leadership conference, Qtel Group addressed critical issues of the day, including how mobile operators can step forward to play a vital role in how growing populations can access and leverage mHealth services to better manage wellness, prevention, and chronic disease.
Qtel Group executives said that national eHealth strategies to make healthcare more efficient and affordable were key to bringing more benefits to more people while reducing the burdens put on hospital systems.
For the competition, teams of university students were asked to develop mobile health concepts that would address specific needs. Among the 12 finalists were a contingent from the Arab World, including Lebanon’s Notre Dame University and the Jordan University of Science and Technology. The team from Indonesia’s Bandung Institute of Technology was supported in its efforts by Indosat, a Qtel Group Company, as part of Indosat Innovation Lab in Jakarta.
In the end, Jordan’s University of Science and Technology’s mobile-based “Snore Detector” was named as one of four finalists, and the overall winner was a joint team from MIT from the US and the Federal University of Rio Grande Do Norte from Brazil, who created the Sana AudioPulse.
Supported by industry group the GSMA, Qtel Group and Qualcomm Incorporated, the Mobile Health University Challenge aims to engage the brightest and best student minds to pioneer mobile health concepts, applications, and devices compatible with wellness, awareness, diagnosis, treatment and monitoring, clinician support tools and health information systems.
The competition comes at an opportune time for the mobile industry, with recent analysis by PricewaterhouseCoopers suggesting that mobile-enabled services will become integral to healthcare delivery by 2017, creating a global market worth about USD $23 billion.
GSMA estimates there are more than 320 different medical applications of mobile technology currently in use around the world. Companies from across the Qtel Group are working to enhance mHealth offerings for customers, with a number of recent innovations released by Wataniya Kuwait, Asiacell, and Wataniya Maldives, as well as Indosat.
Khaleej Times Launches 2026 Subscription Campaign with Exclusive RewardsDubai, UAE, 23 December 2025: Khaleej Times has launched its 2026 annual..
RING LAUNCHES NEW AI-POWERED SMART VIDEO SEARCH IN THE UAESmart Video Search ensures customers can quickly pinpoint important moments directly..