Health investments in many countries often begin with procurement. When a disease becomes a priority, partners mobilize resources and purchase diagnostic machines. Announcements are made, devices are delivered, and distribution lists are shared. On paper, diagnostic capacity appears to have expanded significantly.
Yet months later, patients in many communities still travel long distances to confirm a diagnosis, treatment is delayed, and clinicians continue to make decisions without laboratory evidence. The machines exist — but access to diagnosis has not improved as expected.
The problem is simple but frequently misunderstood: access to diagnosis is not created by equipment alone. It is created by a functioning diagnostic network.
The Equipment Assumption
Health planning commonly assumes that placing devices in facilities automatically improves access. This assumption overlooks how diagnostic services actually work.
A diagnostic device is only one component of a larger system. For a patient to benefit, several steps must happen successfully:
- A patient must be identified and tested.
- A sample must be properly collected.
- The sample must reach a testing site in good condition.
- The test must be performed correctly.
- Results must be transmitted back to the clinician.
- The patient must be linked to treatment.
Failure at any single step means the diagnosis effectively never occurred, regardless of how advanced the machine is.
What Is a Diagnostic Network?
A diagnostic network is the coordinated system that connects patients, health facilities, laboratories, sample transportation, data systems, and treatment services. It determines whether a diagnostic device translates into real patient care.
In a strong network:
- smaller facilities collect samples
- transport systems move specimens regularly
- testing sites process samples efficiently
- results return quickly
- clinicians act on them
In a weak network, devices sit idle, cartridges expire, and clinicians revert to presumptive treatment.
The Hidden Bottleneck: Sample Transport
In many settings, the greatest barrier to diagnosis is not testing capacity but specimen movement. Laboratories may have the ability to run tests, but samples never reach them.
Without reliable transport:
- early infant HIV diagnosis is delayed
- tuberculosis confirmation is postponed
- outbreak detection becomes slower
A motorcycle rider or courier schedule can have more impact on patient survival than an additional machine placed in an underutilized facility.
Data Systems Are Part of Diagnostics
Diagnostic access also depends on information flow. If results take weeks to reach facilities, clinical decisions occur without evidence. Patients may never return for results, and treatment initiation is delayed.
A functioning network therefore requires:
- standardized reporting tools
- electronic result transmission where possible
- clear communication channels between laboratories and clinicians
Diagnostics is not only a laboratory function. It is a service delivery process.
The Maintenance Reality
Another common challenge is maintenance. Procurement budgets are usually secured, but maintenance systems are rarely funded adequately. Devices eventually fail, and facilities wait months for repair. During this period, diagnostic capacity effectively disappears.
Sustainable diagnostic services require:
- preventive maintenance
- trained local biomedical support
- clear service contracts
- spare parts availability
Without these, equipment expansion produces only temporary gains.
Why Networks Matter for Universal Health Coverage
Universal health coverage depends on timely and accurate diagnosis. Treatment without diagnosis leads to incorrect care, drug resistance, and wasted resources. When diagnostic networks function well, they improve efficiency across multiple diseases simultaneously.
A sample transport system built for one programme can support HIV, tuberculosis, hepatitis, and emerging outbreaks. A digital reporting platform can serve many services. Network investments therefore strengthen the entire health system, not a single disease programme.
Rethinking Investment Priorities
Improving diagnostic access requires a shift in planning priorities. Instead of asking, “How many machines were deployed?”, programmes should ask:
- How long does it take a patient to receive results?
- What proportion of suspected cases get tested?
- How many results lead to treatment initiation?
- Where in the process do delays occur?
Measuring network performance, not equipment numbers, provides a more accurate picture of diagnostic access.
Conclusion
Machines are essential tools, but they are not the intervention. The intervention is the system that allows those tools to function within routine care.
Health programmes succeed when diagnostic networks are designed intentionally — with transport systems, trained personnel, maintenance support, and data flow considered from the start.
When diagnostic networks work, patients receive timely care. When they do not, equipment becomes an investment without impact.
Improving health outcomes therefore requires shifting attention from devices to delivery systems. In diagnostics, the network — not the machine — determines whether a life is saved.


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