This post is the third in a five part series on a radical new approach to scaling BoP business models, what we call a transformative sector strategy. In this segment, I describe how this strategy could transform the health sector in emerging economies.
Last Mile Health Care Delivery

Talk to Health Stores [0] in Kenya, an enterprise trying to staff small pharmacies with nurses, and another part of the problem becomes clear: the sheer lack of doctors, nurses, and pharmacists in emerging markets. There are not anywhere close to the number of skilled professionals needed to cover rural areas, and these health workers overwhelmingly refuse to live either in rural areas or in urban slums. So technologies, organizational models, and legal changes that enable local diagnosis and remote practice by doctors and pharmacists could play a critical role.

Compounding the problem are informal supply chains in many countries that sometimes provide poor quality, fake or simply expensive medicines. In the Philippines, for example, many rural people often buy drugs from a convenience store at two to three times the pharmacy price. So building a disciplined pharmaceutical supply chain that extends to most communities could help with quality and access. With onsite diagnosis and remote practice tools, it could also become a key piece of the missing infrastructure for last mile health care delivery.
Taking Good Intentions To Scale
As it happens, there are at least four instances of a franchise pharmacy model-in Kenya [0], Ghana [0], Mexico [0], and one state in India--that could address these problems. None of them have yet scaled, and none of them have put all the pieces together, but they show interesting strengths. As franchises, they can expand with modest capital investment, can enlist local business talent who know the communities to be served, and can use surprise audits, secret shoppers, and other well-established approaches to ensure a disciplined supply chain with no fake drugs; so part of the value proposition (and the brand) is "drugs that work."
Selling mostly or exclusively locally-produced generic medicines, these franchise pharmacies can often be the low-cost provider. Because they typically focus on the most common healthcare problems, they stock a modest range of medicines, preventive commodities, reading glasses, and similar goods - making it easier to push distribution out to more remote communities.
As remote practice tools and services expand, the pharmacy platform, especially with an IT connection, may prove even more valuable, enabling not just remote supervision of the local unit by a licensed pharmacist or doctor, but also a simple x-ray or sonogram taken locally to be read at a central hospital or radiology practice while the customer waits. They would then know whether rest and medicine would take care of the problem, or a trip to a doctor or hospital is required. GE has already launched [1] a new, portable electrocardiograph that weighs just three pounds. Add cataract screening, monitoring basic vital signs, infectious disease surveillance, and the result could be a transformation of rural health care.
At a national scale, these franchise pharmacy chains can be sizeable, profitable, businesses that create local jobs and wealth. And there is ample opportunity to replicate the model in many countries.
In my next post, I will summarize common links between the two seemingly disparate business models in the health and ICT sectors that I have discussed here and in my previous post [1], identifying the common business DNA that makes for a transformative sector solution.