MUrgency app aims to reduce the response time to medical emergency in India almost by half

Follow Us

A San Francisco-based company founded by a Keralite has developed a new mobile app MUrgency to provide emergency medical assistance to people in developing countries. MUrgency is a cloud platform and mobile application which will connect people in need of medical assistance through its network, which is connected to verified professionals. The app will make the nearest emergency responder (nurse, doctor, paramedic, ambulance etc.) available to a person facing a medical emergency.

MUrgency app india




The app is launched in global partnership with Business Call to Action at the United Nations Development Program, Young Global Leaders at the World Economic Forum, Stanford ChangeLabs, Harvard Asia Center and MIT Global Health. It will be launched in India by August 2015 in the state of Punjab and will cover the whole country by January 2018. The founder of the app is Shaffi Mather, an Indian America entrepreneur.

A trial run of the app was already done in Punjab, Dubai and Israel. The results show that the app reduces the response time to less than half of what it takes an ambulance in an efficiently run ambulance system to reach the emergency victim. In Israel, the app has brought down the response time to 2.54 minutes from the earlier 8-12 minutes.

The Global Responder enrollment, validation and onboarding is done by Ziqitza Health Care Limited, India’s and the developing world’s largest emergency ambulance service company.

According to MUrgency’s founder and CEO Shaffi Mather, “It is well known that timely medical assistance is the most critical factor in saving lives. Unfortunately, it is not readily available to 90 percent of world’s population. At MUrgency, it is our mission to make fast emergency medical assistance available through the mobile phone to anyone, anytime, anywhere across the world by 2020 with just one tap on your phone.”

According to WHO estimates, more people die from lack of timely care than from AIDS, TB and malaria combined.

Reported By

Reporter

An astute writer with a track record in writing and publishing content for various industries, Ria brings on board her wealth of experience in journalism and love for technology to TelecomTalk. When not writing or reading, she spends a copious amount of time daydreaming and finding obscure Japanese folklore on the internet.

Recent Comments

Faraz :

Now that Jio has more 5G customers than 4G, how come 4G users are consuming more data. If Jio had…

Jio's 5G Data Traffic Reaches Almost Half of the Total…

Ashok :

I have added airtel iptv since March 2025 with existing Rs 499 plan to Rs.699 black plan upgrade. HD channels…

Airtel IPTV: First Look at XstreamTV 4K STB and Initial…

TheAndroidFreak :

I am a regular traveller to South Gujarat and recently my cousin has shifted to Ahmedabad for his work again,…

Indus Towers Sees Marginal Q4 Profit Decline Amid Airtel Tower…

T A :

Exactly. Vi shouldn’t blindly follow Airtel on the path to self-destruction.

Indus Towers Sees Marginal Q4 Profit Decline Amid Airtel Tower…

Gavin :

I was told by Airtel 121 CC that IPTV is not applicable for existing Wi-Fi (XStream AirFiber ) Subscriber's. You…

Airtel IPTV: First Look at XstreamTV 4K STB and Initial…

Load More
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments