Smarter health worldwide.
The Global Digital Health Monitor is an interactive digital resource that tracks, monitors, and evaluates the use of digital technology for health across countries.
The Global Digital Health Monitor is an interactive digital resource that tracks, monitors, and evaluates the use of digital technology for health across countries.
The Global Digital Health Monitor (GDHM) is an interactive digital resource that helps countries to prioritize and monitor their digital health interventions and enablers that uses the WHO/ITU eHealth Strategy Toolkit as the underlying foundational framework. The tool consists of 23 indicators in the areas of leadership & governance; strategy & investment; legislation, policy & compliance; workforce; standards & interoperability; infrastructure; services & applications; and cross-cutting issues like emerging technology and equity.
The aim of the global digital health monitor is to:
Monitor and improve quality of digital health at the country level
Track progress towards comprehensive and integrated digital health systems
Identify areas of funding and technical assistance needs within and across countries
Encourage better alignment among policy makers, donors, and implementers in the digital health field in alignment with the Principles for Digital Development and Donor Alignment for Digital Health
Highlight potential areas of risk for investment at the country level
In early 2016, HealthEnabled and the Global Development Incubator (GDI) partnered with Dalberg’s Design Impact Group (DIG), ThoughtWorks, and representatives from 20+ countries and 50+ international agencies and organizations to design the Global Digital Health Index (GDHI).
In 2022, the tool underwent a year-long indicator and platform review and redesign process to align the indicators with the WHO Global Digital Health Strategy as a complement to the WHO Digital Health Atlas and includes a greater focus on AI, equity, gender, and Universal Health Coverage. In addition, the name was changed to GDHM to articulate the tool’s value in providing a platform to monitor digital health progress at the country, regional and global levels. The updated GDHM includes year on year performance monitoring country visualizations, regional visualizations, and country to country comparisons.
Read additional resources here (French version).
The GDHM is co-facilitated by HealthEnabled, a digital health nonprofit, and the Global Development Incubator (GDI), an organization that builds social impact startups and partnerships.
ThoughtWorks is the technology partner developing the web-based Index.
Dalberg Design is the design partner for the Index.
The GDHM Technical Committee includes a broad range of government, private sector, academic, NGO, and other top institutions and individuals in digital health:
Sean Blaschke, UNICEF
Joseline Carias, RECAINSA
Emanuele Capobianco, WHO Foundation
Gabriel Catan, World Bank
Rebecca Distler, McGovern Foundation
Vajira Dissanayake, Commonwealth Medical Association
Carine Gachen, Gavi
Jai Ganesh Udayasankaran, AeHIN
Skye Gilbert, PATH
Rajendra Gupta, Ministry of Health India
Boonchai Kijsanayotin, Ministry of Public Health, Thailand/Asia e-Health Network
Mark Landry, Global Fund
Ousmane Ly, Digital Health Consultant
Jeroen Maas, Philips
Alvin Marcelo, University of the Philippines Manila
Dykki Settle, PATH
Lucy Setian, Novartis
Professor Teng Liaw Siaw, WHO Collaborating Centre for eHealth based at UNSW, Sydney
Chaitali Sinha, IDRC
Frank Smith, Transform Health
Steve Wanyee, Intellisoft Kenya
Adele Waugaman, USAID
Tim Wood, Gates Foundation
In addition to our team and funders, GDHM is pleased to count several global organizations as partners, including the Asian Development Bank, Asia eHealth Information Network, Commonwealth Medical Organization, EMPHNET, International Development Research Centre, International Society for Telemedicine and eHealth, International Telecommunications Union, The Global Fund, Gavi, The Vaccine Alliance, The Patrick J. McGovern Foundation, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, PATH, RECAINSA, USAID, UNICEF, and the World Health Organization.
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