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action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home4/scienrds/scienceandnerds/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6114Source:https:\/\/techcrunch.com\/2023\/06\/29\/lightspeed-makes-first-investment-in-africa-backing-ghanas-berry-health\/<\/a><\/br> Sexual and mental health stigmatization in Africa has evolved over several decades to a point where negligence to address the issue has led to the continent topping the charts in sexually transmitted infections (STIs) and mental health cases.<\/p>\n For one, around 11 people per 100,000 die by suicide in Africa yearly, according to the World Health Organization<\/a>; that\u2019s compared to the global average of nine per 100,000 people. In addition, the sub-Saharan region is second only to Southeast Asia in the highest incidence of STIs, with over 80 million cases annually.<\/p>\n There\u2019s no one-size-fits-all approach to tackling the stigma around sexual and mental health in Africa considering sporadic governmental efforts. To this end, Berry Health, a several- months-old Ghanaian startup, is throwing its hat into the ring, like many other startups, off the back of a $1.6 million pre-seed round co-led by U.S.-based large-size funds Lightspeed Ventures (its first investment in Africa) and General Catalyst.<\/p>\n In an interview with TechCrunch, Berry Health founder and CEO Fredua Akosa<\/a> said the health tech startup is \u201cbringing judgment-free health care in a 21st-century way in a continent where stigma cuts deeper and is affecting so many lives.\u201d<\/p>\n Akosa has had quite the career. After moving from London, where he grew up, to Ghana, where he completed medical school, the chief executive practiced as a general practitioner for five years in hospitals around rural and urban areas. But at Yale, where he was advancing his studies in public health as a researcher, and later at Oxford during his MBA, Akosa said he discovered tech\u2019s place in healthcare to \u201cimpact lives at scale.\u201d<\/p>\n \u201cDuring the pandemic, I\u2019d come over to Ghana to visit family and of course, I had a lot of patients, including family members and friends, asking for free consultations. During that period, I realized a massive explosion in mental health conditions and conditions around stigmatized health care,\u201d said the British-Ghanaian medical doctor. \u201cPeople felt so embarrassed going to the hospital and talking about things they felt ashamed of when they shouldn\u2019t have. That was the genesis for me for Berry: just realizing that there is a huge need to break stigma in health through technology.\u201d<\/p>\n If Africa having the highest rates of suicide, clinically diagnosed depression and sexually transmitted infections globally paints a stark picture of the continent, the continent\u2019s low ratio of doctors to individuals (1:10,000) paints a starker picture (in contrast to 30 doctors per 10,000 people in the U.S. and 37 doctors per 10,000 in Europe). The good news, however, is that with help from pandemic-changing behaviors, this situation has accelerated the use of telemedicine, virtual care and drug-delivery platforms in Africa, fueling investor interest in Africa\u2019s health tech in recent years; Yodawy<\/a>, Reliance Health<\/a>, Healthtracka<\/a>, Helium Health<\/a>, Esaal<\/a> and MyHealth Africa<\/a> are a few beneficiaries across the continent.<\/p>\n The models employed by these startups have democratized access to healthcare services traditionally limited to in-person, often expensive consultations. They also enable a broader range of consumers to control their health and wellness, eliminating barriers that have hindered access to quality care. As such, Berry Health, starting with customers from Ghana, offers remote diagnosis \u2014\u00a0 for conditions such as anxiety, depression and sexual health (e.g., birth control and erectile dysfunction), dermatology and hair loss \u2014 through telemedicine and treatment via online consultations and home delivery services. On the platform, customers can talk to a licensed medical doctor or clinical psychologist, have a curated personal treatment plan for their conditions, and then get medications delivered.<\/p>\n \u201cThese are some areas we\u2019re focused on: mental health, dermatology, hair loss and sexual health conditions that generally people feel too embarrassed to go to the hospital. We\u2019re super excited about the number of other players in healthcare because we know how complex the general healthcare problem is, me being a practitioner,\u201d said the CEO. \u201cBut our focus is stigma and we want to make people comfortable in seeking care, not feel judged or as if they\u2019re wrong for seeking treatment.\u201d<\/p>\n The subscription-based platform plans to charge 299GH ($26) yearly for users to access all its services and $5 per consultation with clinicians (Akosa said this fee is 25% less than what is typically charged in Ghana for instance). Berry Health \u2014 whose executive team includes professionals from WPP, Instacart and Babylon Health and a medical advisory board comprising gynecologists, dermatologists and several other specialists \u2014 has signed several doctors and clinicians and intends to emerge out of stealth at the end of next month, according to Akosa.<\/p>\n
\nLightspeed makes first investment in Africa, backing Ghana\u2019s Berry Health<\/br>
\n2023-06-29 22:13:31<\/br><\/p>\n