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Plural Health Unveils Tools to Connect Africa’s Health Systems

Plural Health, a Nigerian health technology company formerly known as PlateauMed, aims to address Africa’s fragmented healthcare system by implementing an integrated digital infrastructure.

In a statement the company said, “From disconnected hospital systems to slow insurance processing and inaccessible patient records, the lack of coordinated digital infrastructure remains a major barrier to effective healthcare delivery on the continent. Plural Health, a Nigerian health technology company formerly known as Plateaumed, has emerged with a sharpened focus on solving this critical challenge.

“With a new name and expanded mission, the company is working to bridge the gap between health service providers, insurers, governments, and patients through intelligent, interoperable platforms.”

Dr. Dare Ladejobi, Chief Executive Officer of Plural Health, said despite a growing number of digitisation efforts across the continent, many healthcare providers still rely on isolated software that cannot share data or scale effectively.

Ladejobi said, “This results in duplicated efforts, gaps in care, inefficiencies in claims management, and ultimately, poor patient experiences. Healthcare in Africa doesn’t suffer from a lack of digital tools; it suffers from a lack of systems that work together. We’re not just launching products. We’re building the connective infrastructure that makes care delivery smarter, faster, and more equitable.”

“Plural Health aims to address these weaknesses through a suite of integrated platforms: NeoEHR, an electronic health record system tailored for African healthcare environments, supports clinical workflows, patient records, and inventory while integrating payment options directly into the care process.

“NeoInsure supports health insurance providers by automating claims, reducing fraud, and enabling digital enrolment through channels like USSD and mobile apps, critical for low-income and rural populations. myNeo, a patient-facing mobile tool, allows users to track their appointments, view diagnoses, and access lab results and prescriptions, even across different care providers.

“Together, these platforms offer a model for building interoperable, scalable digital infrastructure that can support government-led health insurance programs, private HMOs, and hospital networks alike.”

According to him, Plural Health supported over one million patient encounters across more than 60 facilities, laying the groundwork for more coordinated, data-driven healthcare in Nigeria. During the COVID-19 pandemic, the team developed public triage tools via WhatsApp, USSD, and IVR to support federal response efforts, an example of how digital infrastructure can be mobilised at speed and scale.

Ladejobi concluded, “Now, with renewed focus, Plural is positioning itself as a backbone for Africa’s digital health ambitions, one that not only digitises but connects.”

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