About Us
What We Do
We are a group of experts that are passionate about global healthcare initiatives. Our primary purpose is to significantly improve the clinical care of acutely unwell patients through the use of technologically advanced Diagnosis Support Systems (DSS).
Our products achieve this by initiating early clinical assessments and treatment plans, especially when expert intervention is unavailable or delayed. Much too often, this is the situation in many geographical areas of the world.
A great many of serious medical conditions are time critical, and as a consequence, early digital triage and intervention directly reduces mortality and morbidity, whilst improving individual and societal health.
The Davinci concept was developed as a consequence of the vast experience of our clinicians in diverse locations on the globe. Our innovative processes optimise clinical triage and our automated pathways expedite the management of acute presentations.
The Challenge
The challenge is global and the size is enormous, much bigger in Low-Medium-Income countries than in the developed economies. Many of the WHO member countries have less than 1 physician per 1000 population and some countries like Angola have 0.14 per 1000.
In such countries, the chances of seeing a doctor during an acute illness is remote. Vast distances on rugged terrain make clinician visits to isolated areas a near impossibility and therefore, the health needs of sizeable populations are largely unmet. Although nursing care may be locally available, physician decision-making is mostly inaccessible to these groups of patients.
In contrast, many developed economies have a much higher physician per population (e.g. UK 2.825, USA 2.6, Germany 4.2). However, the popularity and success of Emergency Departments and General Practices in such countries led to barely manageable bottlenecks at the point of access of acute care. As a result, there are significant consequences for patients, staff and the health economy.
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“This is long overdue, and it will change the face of initial clinical care worldwide.”
— Dr C Okorie. General Practitioner. London
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“Brilliant. Absolutely brilliant. The days of the long queues in my ED may be coming to an end. The attention to clinical detail is quite impressive”
— Dr Sigismund Wilkey. Emergency Physician. Hertfordshire.
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“Our public access to acute care is profoundly inadequate, and this gives us immense hope.”
— Dr Adamu D. Adamu. Family and Occupational Healthcare Specialist. Abuja.
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“This is a splendid venture, and I am confident that the Algorithm affords my patients a comprehensive assessment when they present with acute issues to facilities away from ours.”
— Dr K Wallace. Oncologist. Los Angeles.