- Haseena Begum is a 21-year-old resident residing in makeshift tents on the
                outskirts of Dhaka,
                Bangladesh. She has a 4-month-old daughter with whom she fled after floods submerged their
                village underwater. She tearfully recalls the horrendous experience of the journey- how they were
                forced to drink contaminated flood water. Her daughter constantly has dysentery and hasn't been
                vaccinated. Her invalid mother-in-law remains bedridden- unable to procure her hypertension
                medications. Unclean toilets and a lack of menstrual hygiene products force girls and women in the
                area to utilize old rags. Haseena hopes to return to her humble village soon, as the encampment is
                ridden with infectious diseases. In such dire humanitarian conditions, access to medical care
                becomes non-negotiable, especially for vulnerable groups such as pregnant and nursing women,
                young children, teenage girls, and the elderly. How can digital health technologies be effectively
                harnessed to support healthcare systems and deliver critical medical assistance during disasters?
              Themes:  
                Climate change, Humanitarian crisis, Maternal and Child
                health, Sexual and
                Reproductive health, Social and Gender dynamics , Emerging technology, Capacity building,
                Community mobilization, 360° campaigns.
 Themes:  
                Climate change, Humanitarian crisis, Maternal and Child
                health, Sexual and
                Reproductive health, Social and Gender dynamics , Emerging technology, Capacity building,
                Community mobilization, 360° campaigns.
            
            - Ramesh is an 18-year-old boy from Bihar studying in Bangalore. He finds his
                new city life
                overwhelming and struggles to adjust to the city culture. Faced with the pressure to do well in
                academics and the burden of isolation in the city, he is constantly plagued with anxiety and panic
                attacks. He doesn't feel comfortable talking about his mental health with his friends and doesn't have
                the funds for counseling. Feeling dejected, he starts looking into online resources and content to find
                something to help him (Haque and Rubya, 2023). 
 
 As more and more young people turn to digital mental health resources, what are some tools or
                innovations that can cater to these groups? And how do we bring more regulation and legitimacy to
                them? Themes: Mental health, Regulation and Policy, e-Health, Social and Behaviour Change 
                Communication Themes: Mental health, Regulation and Policy, e-Health, Social and Behaviour Change 
                Communication
 
- 
 
                Dr Anju is a medical officer posted in a Mohalla clinic (a primary health center) in North Delhi. Over the 
                    four years she has been posted, she has noticed how patients keep returning after the medications she 
                    prescribes have no effect on them, forcing her to resort to second and third-line antibiotics. The Mohalla 
                    clinic was the first formal health clinic in the area, with only traditional healers and quack doctors 
                    practicing there before. Anju wishes to understand her population's resistance patterns to common 
                    pathogens but has limited revenue and no resources to do so. She fears she is propagating 
                    antimicrobial resistance (AMR) within her community by prescribing second-generation antibiotics. 
                    As the pandemic of AMR spreads across the globe, antimicrobial stewardship programs continue to 
                    remain limited due to a lack of resources. Local population resistance patterns are important for 
                    antimicrobial stewardship programs. How can technologists use AI to discern local resistance patterns 
                    and help clinicians prescribe appropriate antibiotics?
 Themes: Antimicrobial resistance, Global Health, AI, Public health, Social and Behaviour Change 
                        Communication
 Themes: Antimicrobial resistance, Global Health, AI, Public health, Social and Behaviour Change 
                        Communication
                       
                 -  With the ongoing demographic transition, a large geriatric population is expected to be added in the 
                    upcoming decades (UNFPA, 2023). Countries like Japan and Italy already have these population 
                    pyramids, with plummeting birth rates. In the forthcoming time, this population will require the greatest 
                    portion of healthcare resources, and considering we are expected to face a shortage of human health 
                    resources, digital health interventions can be a way to manage healthcare resources more optimally.  
                    What are some digital health interventions that can be designed to support their health and well-being, 
                    given that digital literacy is a challenge for elderly populations?
 Themes: Geriatric and population health, Digital health literacy, Technology, Capacity building, 
                        Social and Behaviour Change Communication
 Themes: Geriatric and population health, Digital health literacy, Technology, Capacity building, 
                        Social and Behaviour Change Communication
                        
                - Pema is a 24-year-old farmer in a remote tribal village in Chhattisgarh. Sickle-cell disease is common 
                    in his community (Panigrahi et al, 2015), and many children and adults alike suffer from 
                    undernutrition. The lack of rain led to a disproportionately low harvest, with erratic weather patterns in 
                    recent years affecting both their incomes and sources of food.  Over 2 billion people worldwide are 
                    deficient in micronutrients (WHO, 2006), with climate change threatening to exacerbate nutritional 
                    deficiencies and the existing food insecurity. Vulnerable people like Pema are often at the receiving 
                    end of this crisis. 
                    What are some innovative digital health tools or programs to help alleviate the growing burden of 
                    nutritional deficiencies?
 Themes: Climate change, Tribal health, Nutrition, Food security, Anemia, Social and Behaviour 
                        Change Communication
 Themes: Climate change, Tribal health, Nutrition, Food security, Anemia, Social and Behaviour 
                        Change Communication
                        
                        
                -  Makena is a 16-year-old girl from Burkina Faso. At home, she takes care of her younger siblings and 
                    helps her mother with housework and fetching water. She has little time to rest or study. Her father is 
                    the only person in the family to own a mobile phone and is away working for most of the day. Her 
                    friend Kwame was given an old phone and explained how she has been watching educational videos 
                    to learn on her phone. She tells how she watched a video explaining why Female Genital Mutilation 
                    (FGM) (FMGCRI, n.d.), a common practice within their community, is rejected medically and is an 
                    outdated practice harmful to girls. Makena is shocked and excited to hear this. She goes home to explain 
                    this to her mother who remains skeptical, arguing how their grandmothers and ancestors have been 
                    doing it, and it is a tradition they must continue.  There is a lot of misinformation and disinformation 
                    among women when it comes to their health- especially sexual and reproductive health. Women are 
                    less likely than men to own mobile phones (GSMA, 2024). This has many implications for access 
                    issues, including information asymmetry. 
                    What are some ways access to mobile phones can help resolve health issues of poor women in subSaharan Africa?
 Themes: Sexual and Reproductive health, Information asymmetry, mHealth, Community 
                        mobilization, Social and Behaviour Change Communication
 Themes: Sexual and Reproductive health, Information asymmetry, mHealth, Community 
                        mobilization, Social and Behaviour Change Communication
                        
                        
                - Priya is a tea garden worker in Dibrugarh, Assam. She and her husband recently had a newborn son 
                    who was born without any complications. During her pregnancy, she did not go for her antenatal care 
                    visits regularly.  A few days after birth, Priya developed a breast infection (mastitis) and was unable to 
                    breastfeed her son. Both Priya and her husband became worried, unable to understand what else to 
                    feed their newborn. The two have limited awareness of post-natal self-care. In rural areas where there 
                    is a lack of human health resources and unawareness, a lack of continuum of maternity care can 
                    result in negative birth outcomes. 
                    How can digital health tools aid the promotion and uptake of the continuum of care across the course 
                    of pregnancy for such groups?
 Themes: Family health, continuum of care, Community mobilization, Social and Behaviour Change 
                        Communication
 Themes: Family health, continuum of care, Community mobilization, Social and Behaviour Change 
                        Communication