Children in a rural South Sudan community served by a PHCU
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Projected scenario

Registering 12,000 households offline across a PHCU network

County PHCU Network (illustrative)·Primary Health Care Units · 14 sites·Kajo-keji County, Central Equatoria·Live since Pilot ready
Households registered
12,000+
in 90 days
ANC 1st-visit rate
+20 pts
vs paper baseline
Sync data freshness
30 days
from 12 weeks
Tablets per network
1 / PHCU
low cost

What a county PHCU network could achieve with Boma Health Workers running TamamHealth CMS on offline tablets: tens of thousands of households registered within the first 90 days, with full sync at monthly supervision visits.

The kind of problem we're built for

Many county PHCUs are hours from the nearest reliable internet connection. Each PHCU relies on monthly supervision visits to surface health data up to the State and National levels.

Paper household registers get lost or damaged during seasonal flooding, and Boma-level patient counts that feed into county planning are 12–18 weeks old at the time decisions get made.

How TamamHealth changes the day

Each Boma Health Worker receives a low-cost Android tablet running TamamHealth CMS. Patient registration, ANC visits, immunizations, and household visits all entered offline.

Monthly supervision tablets sync over a hotspot at the Payam supervisor's compound — a 20-minute round trip per BHW, fully automated.

Sync conflicts (rare — typically duplicate household IDs) surface in a queue for the Payam supervisor to resolve.

What we'd expect three months in

Tens of thousands of households registered across the network with full geocode anchoring (BOMA-XX-HH#### format).

ANC first-visit registration rate could lift 20+ points as women register at the closest PHCU rather than waiting for a county-hospital visit.

County health team receives a fresh data export every month, on time, every time.