Dumisani Kaliati: The dynamic digital health innovator
The 2017 graduate in Bachelors of Science in Information Technology has a strong passion for technology and a burning desire for constant innovation. When Dumisani was young, he was fascinated by the working principle of magnets, which opened his mind to a world of discovery and creative thinking.
His skills in technology and desire for innovation strongly increased in 2015 when he got introduced to microcontroller devices which he loved so much, and later he developed a security system based on it aimed at protecting assets of the people in his community. In September 2015, he attended 3 days intensive entrepreneurship training organized by the 3 Day startup which opened his mind to entrepreneurship.
Being raised by a single parent, Dumisani witnessed the economic challenges his mother went through to provide for him and his sister and this combated with high levels of poverty and high levels of the unemployment rate in Malawi, Dumisani saw the need to turn his passion for technology into a money generating activity.
He founded Micromek in December 2015 as a microcontroller-based systems prototyping startup, which he bootstrapped and run in his college dorm.
Later in 2016 he came up with another innovation called TDOSE, an SMS reminder prototype system device aimed at supporting hospitals in improving the out-patient medication adherence to the hospital prescribed dosage and the sending of healthy tips through the use of automated SMS reminder messages as a means of improving adherence to hospital medication and providing remote access to hospital information to the citizens living in rural areas of Malawi who are mostly faced with mobility challenges due to poor road networks and bad terrain.
Later in Early 2017 Dumisani co-founded and developed Peza a social venture aimed at exposing and connecting blue-collar workers such as plumbers, and electricians in Malawi to their potential clients near them via web and mobile technology as a means of reducing unemployment level in the informal sector which contributes to about 89% of the total labor economy in his country.
In November 2017 Dumisani was trained in production and operation of low cost design unmanned aerial vehicles (drones) with Dr. Kevin Kochersberger of the Virginia Tech University and the UNICEF at the UNICEF Humanitarian drone corridor in Kasungu Malawi where they successfully run over 19 km autonomous drug delivery flight test mission from a rural health center in Kasungu to the drone corridor test site.
His startup, Micromek is now exploring the prospect of locally producing and maintaining the low cost unmanned aerial vehicles to be used by hospitals and relief organizations in delivery of emergency drugs, child vaccines, lab test samples and blood products to disaster areas and the remote rural health centers of the developing world in Malawi and across Africa.
It will overcome any mountains, poor and flooded road networks and bad terrain which currently stand as major barriers to timely access to hospital resources in the remote areas of the developing world.
He also received the entrepreneurship innovation award by the ICT Association of Malawi and emerged as the winner of Blantyre pitch night competition and 3rd place winner in the Poly Design competition with Peza.
Dumisani has enjoyed a list of mentorship through local entrepreneurship hubs such as The Poly Design studio, Mhub, Blantyre Entrepreneurs Hub, and with Dr Kevin Kochersberger of the Virginia Tech University.
Dumisani envisions of using technology as a means of elevating poverty and providing better access to health resources to the people in his country. He dreams of employing more than 5000 youths through his startup and on the other hand being a motivation to the youth and upcoming young innovators in his community.