In a remote Pakistani village surrounded by lush green hills, Mohammad Fayyaz brings his two-year-old son to a clinic so that a female doctor sitting hundreds of kilometres away can examine him.
Healthcare in rural Pakistan and the careers of women doctors are being revolutionised as internet access grows across the country, allowing people with limited mobility because of geography or culture to interact online.
Previously, Fayyaz would have had to travel for hours from his village of Bhosa, in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) province, only to spend hours queuing at overcrowded clinics in cities like Abbottabad or Peshawar for medical help.
Women doctors more than 1,500 kilometres to the south in the port of Karachi, Pakistan's largest city, face their own challenges, with their careers often put on ice once they marry and become mothers in the conservative, patriarchal country.
Now, a Karachi-based health tech startup, Sehat Kahani, has deployed Skype to solve both problems at once by bringing work to the doctors and medical advice to the villages.
“My son took just one dose of medicine and he feels much better now,” Fayyaz told AFP after paying a nominal fee of 100 rupees to visit the Sehat Kahani clinic in his village and speak face-to-face via video conferencing to a doctor in Karachi.
Convenience is everything in a place where women must walk for miles to fetch water from a spring and power cuts can last up to 12 hours a day, the low hum of generators a constant backdrop to village life.
“It is very helpful, particularly for female patients because it is close to all of us,” Fayyaz says.
“That's why I am here,” agrees Bibi Mehrunisa, one of the many women clustered in the clinic's waiting room, some with children in tow.
Marriage vs career
It's also important for the women on the computer screens.
At her Karachi home, doctor Benish Ehsan was multitasking, caring for her child as he sat on her lap, even as she began her online examination of a young patient in Bhosa.