In Ethiopia, diabetes management is often hindered by the geographic divide between urban hubs like Addis Ababa and remote rural highlands. The reliance on traditional finger-prick methods is high, yet the instability of supply chains for consumables often makes a continuous glucose monitor a more sustainable long-term investment for patients.
Environmental factors, including extreme humidity in lowland regions and high altitudes in the central plateau, place significant stress on the calibration and stability of medical diagnostic equipment. There is a critical demand for a robust glucose monitor patch that can maintain adhesive integrity and sensor accuracy under varying sweat levels and temperatures.
Economic constraints and a shortage of specialized endocrinologists mean that autonomous monitoring systems are no longer a luxury but a necessity. The shift toward a non invasive glucose monitor is gaining traction as a way to increase patient compliance and reduce the biohazardous waste associated with traditional strips.
