WUNRN
Physicians for Human Rights
MEDICAPT MOBILE APPLICATION HELPS DOCUMENT TO PROSECUTE SEXUAL VIOLENCE IN CONFLICT ZONES
MediCapt is a mobile application, under development by the Program on Sexual Violence in Conflict Zones at Physicians for Human Rights (PHR), to help clinicians more effectively collect, document, and preserve forensic medical evidence of sexual violence to support the local prosecution of these crimes. This critical tool converts a standardized medical intake form for forensic documentation to a digital platform and combines it with a secure mobile camera to facilitate forensic photography. By combining these components, MediCapt will help preserve critical forensic medical evidence of mass atrocities, including sexual violence and torture, for use in courts. Health care providers will use the app to compile medical evidence, photograph survivors’ injuries, and securely transmit the data to authorities engaged in prosecuting and seeking accountability for such crimes.
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http://thinkprogress.org/world/2014/07/11/3459162/app-rape-war-zones/
A victim of a mass rape campaign in the DR Congo. Her identity has been concealed for security reasons and because rape carries strong stigma. AP Photo/Pete Muller
A new smartphone app, currently being tested in the Democratic
Republic of Congo, could help doctors in areas of conflict better document the
injuries of sexual assault and rape victims in order to prosecute more cases of
sexual violence.
Developed by Physicians for Human Rights (PHR), MediCapt
allows doctors to utilize smartphone technology to photograph sexual assault
victims injuries and submit medical examination to an online database. Law
enforcement officials in
According to a United
Nations report, several dozen women are raped or sexual assaulted in the
Karen Naimer, PHR’s Program on Sexual Violence in Conflict Zones,
says that over the past two years, the organization has worked with officials
in the
So PHR created MediCapt — an app which converts the standardized
form to a digital platform and pairs it with pictures of victim’s injuries
taken with smartphones that can be used as vital forensic evidence by law
enforcement. A prototype was launched in January in Bukavu, and over six months
PHR conducted field studies on the app and trained doctors on the ground in
“What was most useful was introducing clinicians to the promise
and power of technology as a means for gathering evidence and prosecuting these
crimes,” Naimer said in an interview with ThinkProgress. “Some of them had
never even held a smartphone before, but by the end of the first day everyone
was engaged in the idea of the power this technology could bring.”
Though the app is still in development, Naimer said that PHR is
currently in the process of developing the next generation and plans on doing
more testing in Congo come the fall. In addition to being used for domestic
court cases, the data gathered from MediCapt could eventually be used as
evidence in war crimes trials against human rights violators in the
MediCapt is part of an increased trend of the development of
smartphone apps to help combat sexual violence, some of which are already being
using in the
Students at the University of Missouri created an app
called Safe Trek, which tracks allows users to hold down a button when they are
in an area that feels unsafe and the app begins tracking their location. When
the users feels safe again, they let go of the button and type in a four-digit
code. If the code isn’t submitted after 10 seconds, the app notifies police of
the users location. The app also pools the information it collects and compiles
them on maps to alert users of areas that others have reported feeling unsafe
in.
School officials at
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