Abstract Digital transformation isn’t a silver bullet for healthcare; it’s a management test. Health systems face an ageing population, more chronic illness, thin staffing, and rising costs (World Health Organization, 2023). Technology is often sold as the fix—faster, smarter, cheaper. Sometimes it is. Sometimes it isn’t. This paper treats digital transformation as a socio-technical, managerial journey rather than a software install. It explores three connected themes: how better data shape decisions; how the workforce adapts (or doesn’t); and how patient outcomes move when digital tools land well. Evidence and guidance from high-income contexts and African systems anchor the discussion (World Health Organization, 2019, 2021, 2023; Kickbusch et al., 2021; Sheikh et al., 2021; Chen, Banerjee and Finch, 2020; Li et al., 2022; do Nascimento et al., 2023; Alomar et al., 2024; Sylla et al., 2025). The thread running through all of it: outcomes depend less on the tool and more on leadership, governance, and how tightly design fits the work. Get that right and digital can sharpen decisions, support staff, and lift outcomes. Get it wrong and you buy cost, noise, and inequity.
Esther Ngozi Chinakwe (Fri,) studied this question.