This startup boosts maternal health in Indonesia
Entrepreneurs Anda Sapardan and Abraham Auzan are trialling low-cost tools to cut maternal deaths.

What’s the hardest part of setting up an enterprise?
We have ten people in our Tele-CTG team — most of them are either tech developers or obstetricians. It is great to work with a diverse and passionate team, but it has been difficult to find hardware engineers in Indonesia and it has taken us a lot of time to develop this device. Another challenge came in the form of paperwork, especially the registration process for licensing Tele-CTG. That was tough.
What’s next for Tele-CTG?
Currently we are working with the Association of Laboratory and Health Equipment Enterprises (Gakeslab Indonesia) on the distribution of Tele-CTG. We are also in the process of establishing a command centre together with the Faculty of Medicine at the University of Indonesia, in order to build a network of obstetricians across Indonesia who can interpret the data feeds from Tele-CTG.
The next step is to provide Tele-CTG devices to health centers on the islands of Java and Kalimantan. We hope that by using Tele-CTG, people who live outside urban areas in Java can have better access to maternal healthcare diagnostics.
What advice would you give to people who have bright ideas for social good, and want to act on them?
[Anda Sapardan] If you want to do something good for people, you have to think about the impact for society. Don’t start with the aim of making profit. Be patient and well prepared when things don’t seem as good as you would have expected.
[Abraham Auzan] Young people have so many ideas but the one who makes a difference is the one who implements the idea. What matters more than coming up with new ideas is to implement them, and it takes courage to take risks and be adaptive.
Fahmi Ramadhan is communications assistant at Pulse Lab Jakarta.