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How Avalon Health Uses AI to Fix Clinic Delays in Zimbabwe

Zimbabwe’s public healthcare system, long challenged by staff shortages, inefficient processes, and manual records, is receiving a boost from local startup Avalon Health

A Strained Healthcare System Meets AI Innovation

Zimbabwe’s public healthcare system, long challenged by staff shortages, inefficient processes, and manual records, is receiving a boost from local startup Avalon Health. With only two doctors per 100,000 people—a stark contrast to the World Health Organisation’s recommendation of one per 1,000—the nation’s medical sector is under constant pressure, especially in urban low- and middle-income communities.

In the midst of this, Avalon Health, founded in 2022 by Panashe Madzudzo, is deploying an AI-powered practice management platform that’s already making waves in private healthcare circles.


Streamlining Operations: From 15 to 40 Patients a Day

Avalon Health’s platform automates critical tasks for private clinics—scheduling appointments, managing electronic health records, processing billing, and converting speech into clinical documentation. As a result, doctors who previously managed 12–15 patients per day due to paperwork bottlenecks can now attend to up to 40 patients daily.

“We also found that larger practices with frequent staff turnover needed easier training. The AI-powered interface helps staff simply tell the system what to do, and it understands the intent and completes the task,” said Madzudzo.

Wait times have dropped from 45 to 20 minutes, and clinics have seen 25–40% improvements in operational efficiency.


Tackling Language Barriers in African Healthcare

A major challenge in digital health across Africa is language accessibility. In Zimbabwe, Shona, Ndebele, and English are widely spoken, with indigenous languages often used in patient interactions. While Avalon’s platform boasts 99% translation accuracy in English, its Shona and Ndebele accuracy currently sits at 75%.

“We’re actively training the platform on local languages and plan to expand to Zulu and Tswana for our South African users,” Madzudzo said.


Affordability and Accessibility

Avalon Health operates on a tiered subscription model priced between $80 and $150 per month, supporting up to five users—making it cost-effective for small to mid-sized practices. Patients can access the patient portal for free, encouraging adoption without increasing healthcare costs for the end user.

So far, Avalon serves over 7,000 patients through 100 doctors, mainly in Harare, with a growing presence in Bulawayo, Mutare, and South Africa.


Bootstrapped Growth and Strategic Support

SEE ALSO: Eyone Secures $1M to Revolutionize Healthcare in West Africa

Avalon remains primarily bootstrapped, but has attracted grants from Fortress Innovation Drive and Google for Startups, which included cloud hosting credits via Google Cloud. Despite regulatory hurdles and cloud infrastructure costs, Avalon has continued to grow steadily.

“Developing scalable AI for healthcare data was complex, but our prior experience allowed us to push boundaries,” Madzudzo explained.


AI Regulation: A Work in Progress

Zimbabwe’s regulatory landscape for AI is still in its infancy, with no official guidelines yet in place. However, Madzudzo sees rising interest among African doctors in integrating AI into their practices.

“Doctors across Africa are recognising that those who do not use AI will likely be replaced by those who do,” he said.


Healthtech Momentum in Zimbabwe

Avalon Health’s success reflects broader momentum in Zimbabwe’s healthtech space. Projects like ZimSmart Villages, which has launched 22 telehealth booths in rural areas, demonstrate a growing appetite for digital health innovation. Still, the market for AI-driven clinic management tools remains largely untapped, giving Avalon a first-mover advantage.


Looking Ahead, Avalon Health plans to continue its expansion across Africa, doubling down on local language support, scalable cloud infrastructure, and AI-enabled user interfaces to transform healthcare delivery from the ground up.

Emmanuel Daniji: