IST-Africa 2026 Conference

25 - 29 May 2026

IST-Africa 2026 Agenda (Session Times based on UTC+1)



Updated: 2026-02-25 20:20:15

Disclaimer: This is the Advance Programme, which is subject to change. The Final Programme will be published in March, following receipt of all final papers.

To view presentations within individual sessions, click on View papers assigned to individual session. icon.
To collapse papers in all sessions, click here.
To print the full programme, click Printable Version

Day 1: 25 May 2026

07:30
07:30
Opening Plenary 1a: Welcome
07:35
07:35
Session 2a: eHealth 1
Optimising Healthcare Service Delivery in South Africa through Service-Oriented Architecture: A Practical Perspective
kamvelihle nohashe, university of fort hare, South Africa
Optimizing Performance and User Experience in Healthcare Dashboards
Ann Chemutai, Strathmore University, Kenya
Performance Engineering of a National eLMIS: Optimising Microservices, Caching, and High-Volume Workflows in Lesotho’s Health Supply Chain
Lebajoa Mphatsi, National University of Lesotho, Lesotho
Conversational Artificial Intelligence for Health Information Access in Developing Countries: A Systematic Review
Esther Nderitu Imbamba, United States International University-Africa, Kenya
Recommendations for Enhancing Offline Functionality to ensure Information Availability in South African Public Electronic Health Information Systems
Ronewa Nthatheni, Council of Scientific and Industrial Research, South Africa
09:15
Coffee Break : Break
09:20
09:20
Session 3a: eHealth 2
Implementing AI-Based Disease Modelling in Tanzania’s Healthcare Sector: Experts’ Insights into Awareness, Barriers, and Perceived Impacts
Bernard Mussa, University of Dar es Salaam, Tanzania
Developing a Machine Learning Model to Detect Unauthorised Access in Electronic Health Records of HIV Patients at Grootfontein State Hospital
ELIZABETH NDAMONA MALULU, NAMIBIA UNIVERSITY OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, Namibia
Local Social Structures as Enablers and Barriers for AI Enabled Medical Drone Delivery: Early Evidence from a Developing Economy
Evode Ndayishimiye, University of Cape Town, South Africa
Design and Localization of a Sustainable Electronic Logistics Management Information System for Lesotho
Lineo Mejaele, National University of Lesotho, Lesotho
Willingness to Join Community-Based Medical Schemes in Informal Akwa Ibom: A Descriptive Analysis Using Tableau Visualizations
Said Baadel, Mount Royal University, Canada
11:00
Coffee Break : Break
11:05
11:05
Session 4a: eHealth 3
A framework to influence the behavioural intention of adults to monitor their health using gamification: A qualitative case from South Africa
Liezel Cilliers, University of Fort Hare, South Africa
Development of a Machine Learning Model for Depression Prediction: A case study of Windhoek Central Hospital.
Kamwinekela Paulus, Namibia University of Science and Technology, Namibia
AI-Powered Mental Health Chatbots in Africa: Cultural and Contextual Implications
Pitso Tsibolane, University of Cape Town, South Africa
Understanding Linguistic Patterns of Depression: A Comparative Study of Machine Learning and Deep Learning Approaches
Nyashadzahe Tamuka, University of Fort Hare, South Africa
Design of a Robotic Hand System to address Therapist Shortages in Stroke Recovery
Suvendi Rimer, University of Johannesburg, South Africa
12:45
Lunch : Lunch
13:30
13:30
Session 5a: ICT-enabled Entrepreneurship
A Framework for Digital Transformation of SMEs in South Africa (DTF4SMEs)
Jeetesh Seecharan, UNISA, South Africa
Innovation Meets Entrepreneurship: Rethinking Digital Collection Development for the Future-Ready User
CHARLES MARWA, COLLEGE OF BUSINESS EDUCATION, Tanzania
Open Innovation as a Catalyst for Grassroots Entrepreneurship: Insights from Collaborative Digital Platforms in Nigeria.
Nankyer Sarah Joseph, American University of Nigeria, Nigeria
How Pakistani Entrepreneurs Navigate South Africa's Electronics Repair Market
Omphile Leepile , MUT, South Africa
Overcoming Barriers to Technology Adoption Among Immigrant Entrepreneurs in the Informal Economy
Carolien van den Berg, University of the Western Cape, South Africa
15:10
Coffee Break : Break
15:15
15:15
Session 6a: Technology Enhanced Learning 1
SANReN Connect Proof of Concept – keeping the research community connected
Kasandra Pillay, CSIR, South Africa
Computer‑Aided Learning Management Suite (CALMS): An Offline‑First, TV White Space–Enabled Architecture for Equitable Education in Rural Zimbabwe
Attlee Munyaradzi Gamundani, Namibia University of Science and Technology, Namibia
Academic Library’s Perspective for AI Integration: Case Study of Rhodes University Library
Anele Mabona, Nelson Mandela University, South Africa
Performance Evaluation of Two Private Cloud Systems to Provide Educational e-Services to South African Public Schools Clusters
Tinashe Magwenzi, Rhodes University, South Africa
16:35
End of Sessions

Disclaimer: This is the Advance Programme, which is subject to change. The Final Programme will be published in March, following receipt of all final papers.

To view presentations within individual sessions, click on View papers assigned to individual session. icon.
To collapse papers in all sessions, click here.
To print the full programme, click Printable Version