🗺️ Stakeholder Map HealthChain
Caretakers
Support Community Wellbeing
- Nurses & Doctors at Primary Healthcare Centres (PHCs)
- Community Health Workers
- Traditional Birth Attendants
- Local Clinic Administrators
- Non-profit/NGO health volunteers
- Pharmacists and local chemists
Primary Stakeholders
Institutions & Systems
- Local Clinics & Private Hospitals
- State Ministries of Health
- National Primary Health Care Development Agency (NPHCDA)
- Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC)
- Diagnostic & Imaging Centres
- Immunization Units
- Local Governments & Ward Health Coordinators
- NGOs focusing on maternal/child health, vaccination, or disease surveillance
Emerging Leaders
Youth, Innovators, Informal Influencers
- Youth health advocates on social media
- Local tech community innovators
- University public health students
- Community volunteers handling digital data entry
- Influential midwives & nurses trusted by mothers
- Health-focused community-based organizations
Groups Most Affected by the Challenge
- Mothers with infants (vaccination tracking issues)
- Residents with chronic illnesses (diabetes, hypertension, asthma)
- Migrant workers who move between states
- Rural and semi-urban communities
- Clinics lacking digital systems
- Health authorities relying on incomplete data
- Communities exposed to recurring disease outbreaks (malaria, cholera, measles)
Power Dynamics
Who Has Information But Lacks Systems:
Clinics and healthcare workers—they see patterns but have no digital tools to track or share
Who Has Authority But Lacks Data:
State Ministries of Health, NCDC—they can act but lack real-time information
Who Bears the Burden:
Mothers, chronic illness patients, migrant workers—they suffer most from system failures
Who Can Drive Change:
Youth health advocates, tech innovators, trusted community health workers
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