Skip to main content

From Accession to Acceleration: Building Digital Health Capacity in Timor-Leste and ASEAN

Mochammad Fadjar Wibowo

Research Fellow, SingHealth Duke-NUS Global Health Institute

Share on:

Timor-Leste’s community health program shows a model led by local workers, with features that make it useful for ASEAN countries facing rural access barriers. Photo credit: ADB.

Timor-Leste’s community health program shows a model led by local workers, with features that make it useful for ASEAN countries facing rural access barriers. Photo credit: ADB.

The newest ASEAN member is positioned to leapfrog traditional healthcare barriers by integrating digital tools directly into primary care.

A recent World Health Organisation (WHO) assessment placed Timor-Leste’s digital health implementation maturity at approximately 38.3% which is about 23 points below the regional average in Southeast Asia. While this highlights gaps in governance, infrastructure, and human resources, it also underscores an opportunity for targeted investment and coordinated support.

At present, about 45% of Timor-Leste’s population has internet access, compared with around 69% regionally. The population is predominantly young (with the median age being around 20 years) and largely rural. While challenging, this condition provides fertile ground for scalable digital solutions in years to decades to come.

Given these structural features, Timor-Leste is well-placed to adopt non-linear development pathways by integrating digital tools directly into primary health care. Rather than replicating traditional infrastructure-heavy models, digital systems can extend reach and responsiveness, helping the country progress more rapidly toward universal health coverage.

Emerging initiatives and system foundations

Timor-Leste’s community health program Servisu Integrado du Saude Comunidade shows a model led by local workers. It reaches remote villages. It uses structured outreach. It earns public trust. These features make it useful for ASEAN countries facing rural access barriers. This demonstrates Timor-Leste can contribute scalable governance ideas, not only receive support.

Several initiatives already point to the feasibility of this approach. The Liga Inan mobile health program connects expectant and new mothers with community health providers through text messaging, contributing to improved maternal and child health outcomes. Integrated Case-Based Electronic Surveillance System enables case-based disease tracking. It supports patient-level surveillance which is an important foundation for data-driven decision-making.

Building on these experiences, three interrelated system areas warrant continued attention:

  1. First, infrastructure and interoperability. Investments in digital connectivity, cloud-based health information systems and interoperable data standards remain central. Timor-Leste can benefit from regional guidance such as the Asia eHealth Information Network’s “Mind the GAPS” framework, which highlights four key pillars: governance, architecture, program management, and standards/interoperability. These will allow seamless information exchange across primary care facilities, outreach services and referral hospitals, strengthening real-time monitoring of priority indicators such as maternal mortality, stunting and tuberculosis.
  2. Second, workforce and digital literacy. Capacity development is equally critical. A recent national survey identified persistent disparities in access to digital tools and competencies among rural health staff. Training initiatives such as Maluk Timor’s digital literacy program demonstrate how local partnerships can enhance practical capabilities and confidence in using digital platforms for clinical and reporting functions.
  3. Third, governance, policy and sustainable financing. Digital transformation benefits from a clear strategic framework. A recent study on artificial intelligence adoption in Southeast Asia found that robust digital infrastructure and data governance are critical enablers for innovation in healthcare. The Government of Timor-Leste has initiated a national digital health strategy. When such an initiative is supported by consistent policy alignment, data-governance safeguards and long-term financing, it may lead to coherent implementation and facilitate regional cooperation.

Looking ahead

The inclusion of Timor-Leste completes ASEAN’s long-envisioned family. The next step is to enable that this unity translates into tangible improvements in health and well-being. Digital transformation offers a practical pathway—one grounded in evidence, partnership and shared responsibility.

When guided by strategic investment and inclusive governance, Timor-Leste’s digital health journey could evolve from adaptation to contribution, offering regional insights on how smaller or resource-limited states can strengthen resilience throughout Southeast Asia.

ASEAN expansion can catalyze shared digital health growth. Timor-Leste’s local system models support that vision. Innovation and solidarity should move together.

This article was first published by Tech for Good Institute, in collaboration with SingHealth Duke-NUS Global Health Institute, on 5 January 2026.

Mochammad Fadjar Wibowo

Research Fellow, SingHealth Duke-NUS Global Health Institute

Mochammad Fadjar Wibowo is a research fellow at the SingHealth Duke-NUS Global Health Institute. His research focuses on integrating artificial intelligence into regional health systems. He holds a master's in global health from Karolinska Institute (Sweden) and a doctor of medicine from Gadjah Mada University (Yogyakarta Sultanate). For his contributions to global health, he received awards from Charité–Universitätsmedizin Berlin (Germany) and Australia's Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade.

Tech for Good Institute

The Tech for Good Institute is a nonprofit organization working to leverage the promise of technology and the digital economy for inclusive, equitable, and sustainable growth in Southeast Asia. The Institute is seed funded by Grab, a leading superapp in Southeast Asia.