Context

Every year, tens of thousands of adults and children experience sexual and gender based violence (SGBV) in conflict zones worldwide. Many survivors do not report SGBV due to stigma, fear of reprisals, lack of pathways to care and justice and widespread impunity. When reported, cases often fail due to poor evidence and the breakdown of transmitting information from medical facilities to legal systems.

In Democratic Republic of Congo, PHR has long partnered with HEAL Africa Hospital, an institutional leader in sexual violence response in Goma. The hospital has been used as a project pilot to digitally document forensic medical evidence of sexual violence and increase access to justice for survivors.

Digital social innovation

As part of its efforts to mitigate the individual and community-level effects of conflict-related SGBV, PHR developed MediCapt, a mobile application, in collaboration with local clinicians and hospital partners.

The MediCapt app converts a standardized medical intake form for forensic documentation of SGBV to a digital platform and combines it with a secure mobile camera to facilitate forensic photography, enabling clinicians to securely transmit the data to police, lawyers and judges involved in prosecuting SGBV crimes, with the ultimate goal of improving access to justice for survivors.

Achievements
  • 870 cases of sexual violence against women have been documented via MediCapt in the framework of the Wehubit project
  • 100% of these passed the quality test for the documentation of forensic evidence
Country
DR Congo
Sector
eHealth
Digital tool
Mobile application
Duration
-
Budget
315 000 €

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