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Blademy partnered with FasterCapital under its EquityPilot program to scale Bluetooth-enabled health devices for chronic disease management in West Africa.
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The partnership will provide capital, mentorship, commercialization support, and fundraising assistance to accelerate deployment.
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Pilots will launch in Ghana and Senegal within 6–18 months before scaling to Côte d’Ivoire, Nigeria, and Burkina Faso.
The World Health Organization warned that Africa could face a shortage of 6.1 million health workers by 2030 if urgent action is not taken. Digital health is emerging as a key lever to close the gap and expand care access across the region.
Blademy, an initiative of Côte d’Ivoire’s Agence Digitale N’zassa (ADN), signed a strategic partnership with global incubator FasterCapital through its EquityPilot program. The agreement seeks to strengthen digital health in West Africa with locally adapted and affordable solutions.
“Blademy illustrates the kind of pragmatic, high-impact innovation we seek: simple hardware, smart software, and a business model tailored to underserved markets. Our EquityPilot program will provide the capital, network, and technical guidance required to transform demonstrable pilots into scalable impact on health systems,” said FasterCapital founder and CEO Hesham Zreik.
The collaboration will give Blademy growth capital, international mentorship, commercialization support, and fundraising assistance. These resources aim to accelerate the rollout of its offline, Bluetooth-enabled health platform designed to manage diabetes, hypertension, and gout.
Blademy’s solution combines low-cost Bluetooth glucometers, blood pressure monitors, and uric acid testers with an Android/iOS application that functions offline. Data is stored locally and later shared with clinicians, enabling patient monitoring in rural and peri-urban areas while reducing chronic care costs.
The initiative comes as digital health grows rapidly in West Africa but remains hindered by weak connectivity and reliance on imported equipment. Millions in the region suffer from chronic diseases, while shortages of health professionals add pressure to fragile systems. Blademy’s model addresses these local realities by focusing on affordability and offline functionality.
With FasterCapital’s support, Blademy will implement a 6–18 month roadmap starting with pilot projects in Ghana and Senegal. Expansion is planned for Côte d’Ivoire, Nigeria, and Burkina Faso. Long term, the company aims to become a leading digital health player in West Africa, strengthening prevention and reducing the economic burden of chronic illnesses.
This article was initially published in French by Samira Njoya
Adapted in English by Ange Jason Quenum