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Dear Dr. Dey:

Disclosure: I am a licensed amateur radio operator. I am slightly biased. :)

I have one answer: Amateur radio. Forget mobile phone networks.  Amateur radio 
is cheap, very durable and will provide you with the functions you need, and if 
you can get access to amateur radio operators in your country, you may have 
free support for the life of your project!

If you can tell us the country you wish to set this project up we can possibly 
help with finding out more about the amateur radio community in the country.

To answer your questions:

>>> I am proposing to set up a ICT based health project in tribal areas with 
>>> poor infrastructural facilities with poor cell phone connectivity due to 
>>> unstable signal strengths. i have learnt that HAM radio software from 
>>> HamSphere is downloadable on android phones.

Yes it is downloadable, but as far as I understand (it was the case when I 
wanted to install and use the software), it requires the person wishing to 
operate it to send the administrators of the system a copy of their amateur 
radio licence. 

NB: This could have changed.

>>> I would like to know whether these android phones with HAM radio software 
>>> installed can be used for communication used for voice communication 
>>> between health workers themselves and with head quarter staff.

Yes, it would be possible but it would require a) the telecommunications 
infrastructure for an "IP connection" (either mobile phone network, or WiFi).

>>> Will it be legally permissible and what technical requirements will be 
>>> needed to set up such system.

I understand it is still a "requirement" to produce a valid amateur radio 
license to get access to the Hamsphere (and similar systems). 

The technical requirements are an Internet connection capable of carrying your 
amateur radio software messages. Without either a) a mobile phone network, or 
b) a WiFi (or similar system), c) satellite Internet service this is not 
possible.

>>> The other alternative of setting up of mobile signal boosters or long 
>>> distance WiFi hubs are currently not affordable to our limited resource 
>>> organisation


And honestly, would not be a good use of your funds.

- -----------

The APRS discussion:

APRS is still clear text - the only "protection" is that it is a digital mode 
(it is transported over AX.25, a transmission protocol). Anyone with an APRS 
modem and amateur radio *could* decode and read the APRS messages.

End result again is no privacy. Maybe privacy through obscurity.

APRS is used (in UK and Ireland) regularly for passing short messages, and 
information objects (weather conditions/temperature in geographical areas, 
traffic information, movement of rescue teams). I can give you more information 
if you think it's of interest.

There is a system called Winlink (in the States I think its called Sailmail?) 
which can be used to send and receive e-mail, which I think is more what you 
are thinking about.

Winlink operates with a similar objective as e-mail - it sends electronic 
messages to and from stations equipped with Winlink systems. It can be used 
over HF (frequencies with long distance capabilities). But the requirement for 
equipment is greater than 2-way voice communications.


However, in this case, I would ask: is there really a need for privacy? Or at 
least is there a need to identify the patient by name, etc?

Idea:
=====

By European Conference of Postal and Telecommunications (CEPT) regulations and 
the mirroring bodies in other parts of the world, a non-licensed individual is 
allowed to operate a licensed amateur radio station in the presence of a 
license holder. The patient could speak direct to the medical staff to explain 
their conditions, etc.


Scenario:
========
(I don't know if this scenario is feasible or reflects real-life circumstances. 
If not, please give some more details for discussion)


* A patient goes to the health worker, based with the village/nearest health 
station, with a health complaint.

* The health worker needs assistance in helping diagnosis/treatment from 
his/her headquarters. The health worker has been trained and received an 
amateur radio licence.

* They then call the headquarters for more details on the particular patients 
condition.

* The health worker does not name the individual, but gives his/her medical 
background. As the health worker is present, the patient can talk directly to 
the headquarters and give their information first hand. 

* If necessary the patient can be given a pseudonym for use over the radio 
system. The patient's real name could be sent via normal means to the 
headquarters if necessary. 

* The headquarters responds with information for the persons case.

* The information exchanged is not personally identifiable (I guess you could 
argue their voice could be used to identify them...).


They are just some ideas as I thought. I would argue the licencing requirements 
could be adjusted with the assistance of the government departments (usually 
the "Post and Telegraphs")

I hope that helps Dr. Dey. I wish you all the best with your project, and I'd 
be more than happy in helping however I could.

best regards,

Bernard / ei8fdb


On 6 Mar 2013, at 20:08, Ali-Reza Anghaie wrote:

> I'm assuming privacy issues are of minimal concern given the other problems 
> at play here - I could be wrong but bear with me.
> 
> Trying to think of lowest-cost, reliable, easiest to expand and re-deploy 
> without a telco or other licensing.
> 
> I wonder is a low-bandwidth text HF APRS 
> (http://www.aprs.org/aprs-messaging.html) option with a laminated deck of 
> shorthand medical terms would be a reasonable remote field option? About as 
> rudimentary as you get but considering a worst case scenario - it might just 
> work. -Ali
> 
> 
> 
> On Tue, Mar 5, 2013 at 9:15 PM, Sky (Jim Schuyler) <s...@red7.com> wrote:
> Since "HAM" (amateur radio) is real radio, not phone, an Android app wouldn't 
> use it directly. The app might -control- an amateur radio remotely, and there 
> is software available to do this. However, I'm not sure what benefit it would 
> bring to this project.
> 
> In the US, amateur radio operators must send all information in "clear text," 
> and encryption is illegal, thus you would not want to try to exchange medical 
> info because you'd need to encrypt it. In other countries it -should- be 
> illegal to transmit medical info in the clear, so I'd suggest avoiding this.
> 
> Also, "high frequency" amateur radio doesn't have sufficient bandwidth to 
> transfer much digital information. VHF/UHF does in theory, but in general 
> amateur radio operators restrict their bandwidth and the maximum usable 
> transfer rate is under 9600 baud. i.e. very slow.
> 
> -Sky  AA6AX 
> 
> - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
> Sky (Jim Schuyler, PhD)
> -We work backstage so you can be the star
> Blog: http://blog.red7.com/
> Phone: +1.415.759.7337
> PGP Keys: http://web.red7.com/pgp
> 
> On Mar 5, 2013, at 5:47 PM, ITechGeek <i...@itechgeek.com> wrote:
> 
>> Depends on what information you might be transmitting and the specific
>> laws of the local country/countries involved.
>> 
>> HAMs have to be licensed through the local countries licensing
>> authority (in the case of the US would be the FCC).
>> 
>> Under US you could probably get away with allowing them to coordinate
>> if it is non-profit in nature, but you would not be able to discuss
>> any medical information that would allow a third party to possibly
>> identify the patient.
>> 
>> And some countries are very restrictive on who can get HAM licenses
>> due to the potential to get around their propaganda controls.  Also
>> rules can change based on frequencies being used cause lower
>> frequencies can transmit further.
>> 
>> Can you provide the country or countries involved?
>> 
>> -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>> -ITG (ITechGeek)
>> i...@itechgeek.com
>> https://itg.nu/
>> GPG Keys: https://itg.nu/contact/gpg-key
>> Preferred GPG Key: Fingerprint: AB46B7E363DA7E04ABFA57852AA9910A DCB1191A
>> Google Voice: +1-703-493-0128 / Twitter: ITechGeek / Facebook:
>> http://fb.me/Jbwa.Net
>> 
>> 
>> On Tue, Mar 5, 2013 at 8:07 PM, Yosem Companys <compa...@stanford.edu> wrote:
>>> From: Dr. Tusharkanti Dey <dr.tusharkanti...@gmail.com>
>>> 
>>> Dear All,
>>> 
>>> I am proposing to set up a ICT based health project in tribal areas with 
>>> poor infrastructural facilities with poor cell phone connectivity due to 
>>> unstable signal strengths. i have learnt that HAM radio software from 
>>> HamSphere is downloadable on android phones.I would like to know whether 
>>> these android phones with HAM radio software installed can be used for 
>>> communication used for voice communication between health workers 
>>> themselves and with head quarter staff. Will it be legally permissible and 
>>> what technical requirements will be needed to set up such system. The other 
>>> alternative of setting up of mobile signal boosters or long distance WiFi 
>>> hubs are currently not affordable to our limited resource organisation
>>> 
>>> Thanks,
>>> Dr.Tusharkanti Dey
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- --------------------------------------
Bernard / bluboxthief / ei8fdb

IO91XM / www.ei8fdb.org

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