HERA Digital Health’s mission is to provide a mobile health platform that connects refugee populations with healthcare services.
As the first step toward achieving the goal of “preventive healthcare made easy” for refugee mothers and children, HERA aims to increase the rate of prenatal checkups and childhood vaccinations among Syrian refugees living in Turkey under temporary protection. HERA plans to expand its coverage to provide services to refugees worldwide, starting with their current pilot in the US.
“Today’s healthcare systems are designed for people who stay in one place — not refugees,” says Aral Surmeli, MD MPH, CEO of HERA Digital Health. “So we made a simple mobile app to take care of refugee healthcare.”
During pregnancy, refugee women receive an average of one pregnancy checkup. The World Health Organization, meanwhile, recommends at least eight. What’s more, only 30-40% of refugee children are fully vaccinated.
For Syrian refugees in Turkey, a group that as of 2022 totals more than 3 million people, not having access to their vaccination records creates major problems. In some cases, doctors in Turkey are sometimes required to vaccinate people if there is no record on file.
Through its app, HERA is specifically focused on tackling the most important refugee healthcare issues and seeks to add features that have the biggest impact.
After HERA started in 2018, it implemented Cloudflare in its early stages in coordination with its first production launch.
“Our previous CTO had a startup using Cloudflare,” Surmeli notes. “He recommended the solution and Project Galileo as a nonprofit option.”
Adds HERA CTO Su Yuen Chin, “We have an international healthcare application with strict data privacy requirements — the challenge was to address API security and data privacy issues with limited technical staff.”
Entering new markets meant HERA had to keep up with new regulations. The organization found that Cloudflare helped with HIPAA compliance for their US pilot.
Since using Cloudflare, HERA has not had issues with being hacked. They particularly appreciate app security and visibility, such as using Bot Analytics to see which requests are humans vs. bots. Project Galileo has also delivered some performance improvements, which are useful when experiencing spikes of new user signups.
HERA’s first pilot started in 2019, and the organization is currently in v2.0 of their production app. Throughout this time, their goal has been to connect refugees to healthcare, track their healthcare records, recommend and schedule treatments, and provide specific info about where to find healthcare in their host country.
Since app users are providing very sensitive and valuable data, app security is essential.