Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

October 2–5, 2007  Lusaka, Zambia

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "October 2–5, 2007  Lusaka, Zambia"— Presentation transcript:

1 October 2–5, 2007  Lusaka, Zambia
STRATEGIES FOR BUILDING NATIONAL-SCALE LONGITUDINAL ELECTRONIC PATIENT MONITORING SYSTEMS FOR HIV TREATMENT AND CARE IN PEPFAR COUNTRIES October 2–5, 2007  Lusaka, Zambia

2 SmartCare Implementation
Zambia Case Study SmartCare Implementation Dr. Mark Shields , CDC, Zambia Derrick J. Muneene, CDC, Zambia 2

3 Population: 10.3M (2000 Census, CSO)
Over 1600 Health Facilities, some offer ART some offer PMTCT Has 4 level health administrative structure

4 Presentation Outline The Preamble, Problem, Solution and Background
The Assessment (SWOT) of Health Information Systems in Zambia The Design Methodology and Choice of Technology The Development Organization and Process The Implementation : Process, challenge and successes The Current Next Steps

5 The Preamble, Problem, Solution and Background
SmartCare Scope : More than just ART care – OPD longitudinal EHR system EHR Developed based on Existing Zambia MoH Forms

6 Current SmartCare Modules
ART – Adult ART – Paeds (NEW) ANC-PMTCT VCT/CT Labour and Delivery Postnatal (NEW) Labs Pharmacy Various Reports

7 The Problem and Background

8 General service delivery and information challenges
Client confidentiality (especially with regards to HIV positive clients) Unavailability of related health information (ART, TB etc) for continuity of care, to help improve patient care Lack of system to facilitate patient follow-up for both mother and baby, and patients on ART Data aggregation and reporting challenges Etc

9 The Assessment (SWOT) of Health Information Systems in Zambia

10 Zambia H.I.S. SWOT Analysis
Assessment Item Strengths Weaknesses Opportunities Threats Community Card carrying practice : National, business and medical Eagerness for Tech Electronic devices not used in health settings Absence of Standard Practices Strong linkages between communities and local facilities Potential for stigmatization for a card carrying system Non compliance Potential for distrust Health facility Medically Trained health workers Good understanding of existing health paper system Even coverage of population No I.S./IT Training in educational institutions No adequate I.S./I.T infrastructure Availability of user friendly technologies to support non I.T. staff Presence of initial donor support Equipment misuse Equipment theft Lack of on going maintenance Governance structure Local Leadership support and good will Presence of ICT qualified staff Inadequate software development staff at top level Inadequate ICT infrastructure No Confidentiality protocols for health Local Capacity building (for sustainability) Staff migration

11 Zambia H.I.S. SWOT Analysis
Assessment Item Strengths Weaknesses Opportunities Threats Community Card carrying practice : National, business and medical Eagerness for Tech Electronic devices not used in health settings Absence of Standard Practices Strong linkages between communities and local facilities Potential for stigmatization for a card carrying system Non compliance Potential for distrust Health facility Medically Trained health workers Good understanding of existing health paper system Even coverage of population No I.S./IT Training in educational institutions No adequate I.S./I.T infrastructure Availability of user friendly technologies to support non I.T. staff Presence of initial donor support Equipment misuse Equipment theft Lack of on going maintenance Governance structure Local Leadership support and good will Presence of ICT qualified staff Inadequate software development staff at top level Inadequate ICT infrastructure No Confidentiality protocols for health Local Capacity building (for sustainability) Staff migration

12 Zambia H.I.S. SWOT Analysis
Assessment Item Strengths Weaknesses Opportunities Threats Community Card carrying practice : National, business and medical Eagerness for Tech Electronic devices not used in health settings Absence of Standard Practices Strong linkages between communities and local facilities Potential for stigmatization for a card carrying system Non compliance Potential for distrust Health facility Medically Trained health workers Good understanding of existing health paper system Even coverage of population No I.S./IT Training in educational institutions No adequate I.S./I.T infrastructure Availability of user friendly technologies to support non I.T. staff Presence of initial donor support Equipment misuse Equipment theft Lack of on going maintenance Governance structure Local Leadership support and good will Presence of ICT qualified staff Inadequate software development staff at top level Inadequate ICT infrastructure No Confidentiality protocols for health Local Capacity building (for sustainability) Staff migration

13 Zambia H.I.S. SWOT Analysis
Assessment Item Strengths Weaknesses Opportunities Threats Community Card carrying practice : National, business and medical Eagerness for Tech Electronic devices not used in health settings Absence of Standard Practices Strong linkages between communities and local facilities Potential for stigmatization for a card carrying system Non compliance Potential for distrust Health facility Medically Trained health workers Good understanding of existing health paper system Even coverage of population No I.S./IT Training in educational institutions No adequate I.S./I.T infrastructure Availability of user friendly technologies to support non I.T. staff Presence of initial donor support Equipment misuse Equipment theft Lack of on going maintenance Governance structure Local Leadership support and good will Presence of ICT qualified staff Inadequate software development staff at top level Inadequate ICT infrastructure No Confidentiality protocols for health Local Capacity building (for sustainability) Staff migration

14 The Design Methodology and Choice of Technology

15 The Development Team

16

17 But List is more than this …
M&E Staff : CDC, MoH Training Staff : MoH, NG Deployment support staff etc

18 The Choice of Solutions
Data Transport Data Entry Data Storage Date Synchronization

19 The Choice of Solutions
Data Transport Data Entry Data Storage Date Synchronization

20 Continuity of Care : Existing Paper Methods

21 Continuity of Care : Computerized (SmartCare) Patient held tools

22 Data Transport Enforces patient confidentiality and data security, especially for HIV positive mothers Entire EMR is stored on card ART, TB, PMTCT, VCT, etc

23 Data Transport Enforces patient confidentiality and data security, especially for HIV positive mothers System is password driven, with a role based security model (RBS) Card data is compressed and encrypted Card can not be read by a non CCPTS system – requires specialized card driver and code logic to read the data from the smart card

24 Data Transport Based on a distributed database model
The distributed databases are linked via a virtual network for data communication / synchronization, driven by the patient ‘the client serves AS the network’

25 A mother receiving s smart card for the first time

26 Data Transport Based on a distributed database model
The distributed databases are linked via a virtual network for data communication / synchronization, driven by the patient Facility in District Facility in District

27 Data Transport Based on a distributed database model
The distributed databases are linked via a virtual network for data communication / synchronization, driven by the patient Facility in District Facility in District

28 Facility by Facility synchronization
Data Transport Based on a distributed database model The distributed databases are linked via a virtual network for data communication / synchronization, driven by the patient Facility in District Facility in District Facility by Facility synchronization

29 The Choice of Solutions
Data Transport Data Entry Data Storage Date Synchronization

30 A Nurse using a touch screen for data entry

31 UI Objects, such as this soft keyboard, popup appropriately
Uses touch screens for ease of data capture This reduces the computer literacy learning curve

32 3. System Implementation… Cont iii. System Features
Uses touch screens for ease of data capture This reduces the computer literacy learning curve

33 3. System Implementation… Cont iii. System Features
Type ahead feature for text data, to speed data entry Uses touch screens for ease of data capture This reduces the computer literacy learning curve

34

35 The Choice of Solutions
Data Transport Data Entry Data Storage Date Synchronization

36 SQL Server DB A Form of offsite backup C# Front end
Middle tier uses xml for enumerations and Data validations SQL Server DB (Free Express Edition) Keyboard and mouse are optional

37 4. The Choice of Solutions
Data Transport Data Entry Data Storage Date Synchronization, use and reporting

38 District in Prov District in Prov Facility in District
Country National DB De-duplication and De-identification algorithm Prov in Country Prov in Country Provincial DB De-duplication and De-identification algorithm Province by Province synchronization District in Prov District in Prov District DB De-duplication and De-identification algorithm District by District synchronization Facility in District Facility in District Facility DB Asymmetric Merge Record Linkage/De-dup Facility by Facility synchronization

39 The Development Organization and Process

40 The Development Process
The Zambia SmartCare Development, M&E, and Central Deployment Team The Development Process System Design and implementation Process Government and NGO consensus Formation of development teams Concept formation Identification of and collaboration with, existing systems: ZEPRS, PTS, ARTIS, ARTServe, LABIS, HMIS Consensus building and concept formation, Dec2003

41 2. System Design and Implementation Process
Map of Initial District implimentation Piloted in April, 2005 Consensus building and concept formation, 2002

42 2. System Design and Implementation Process
Baseline survey, facility level data Analysis, use, flow of care and record keeping 2. System Design and Implementation Process System Design and implementation Process Map of Initial District implimentation Piloted in April, 2005 Consensus building and concept formation, 2002

43 2. System Design and Implementation Process
To date, there are more than 50 sites running the ART module of SmartCare capital with about 120,000 patients in the database April, 2006, pilot district plans for district wide expansion, after which other district would follow April, 2006, MoH approves CCPTS to be the national system for ART care 14 more Smart card facilities added in 2006 System expanded to include ART (CCPTS) To date, there are 14 sites running the Delivery,ANC-PMTCT-VCT modules of SmartCare based in the initial pilot district, Kafue, with about 7,000 clients carrying smartcards, and stored in the database System reviewed and fine tuned Piloted in April, 2005 Consensus building and concept formation, 2002

44 1 Day District Management Training session
3 Day Frontline Health worker staff training 3 Day Frontline Health worker staff Training 2 day Frontline Health worker staff Training

45 2. System Design and Implementation Process
2007 Modules include integration with other systems and addition of new module: TB, OPD and under five Addition of more modules and expansion of system … To date, there are over 40 sites running the ART module of the SmartCare system nationwide, with about 90,000 patients in the database April, 2006, pilot district plans for district wide expansion, after which other district would follow April, 2006, MoH approves CCPTS to be the national system for ART care 12 more Smart card based facilities added in 2006 System expanded to include ART (PTS TO CCPTS) To date, there are 12 sites running the ANC-PMTCT-VCT modules of SmartCare based in the pilot district, Kafue, with about 5,000 patients carrying smartcards, and stored in the database System reviewed and fine tuned Piloted in April, 2005 Consensus building and concept formation, 2002

46 2007 Work Effort includes: SmartCare and Careware integration

47 The Implementation

48 2006 SmartCare Coverage

49 2006 SmartCare Coverage

50 6. Lessons Learned

51 Lessons learned Smart card adherence has been estimated to be about 98%. This shows that patients will remember to bring smart cards when seeking health care card loss rate is estimated at < 0.4% / person-year Good community awareness led to patient acceptance Inclusion of smart card lessons during group education increases patient confidence and smart card adherence

52

53 Lessoned learned Using touch screens instead of keyboards and mouse reduces computer training time. Health workers were able to work alone with minimum supervision. Interactive software development increases user ownership Presence of local development team increases software processes

54 Some Challenges Harmonization with legacy system (paper based)
Adherence to international standards Printing capacity in low power locations Availing decision support to services that function out doors, like the TB corner Ongoing hardware maintenance By facility staff

55 Current SmartCare Activities
Training Provincial ToT performed on existing models Provincial/District Scale up underway SmartCare and other systems integration (e.g. Careware) Addition of modules Light weight OPD TB module SmartCare use in research activities: Migrant Health workers study E-Learning centre at MoH for continuous education Mapping functionality

56 Example interface for querying the data to generate a map report

57 Example map report interface showing: District map type, color shading, manual classification (user enters break values).

58 Example of: District map type, queried to southern province, color shading, manual classification (user enters break points), and labeling enabled.

59 Example of: Health facility catchment map type, drawing a background layer (health facility points), gray shading, and equal interval classification. Data in this mapping example are fictional.

60 5. Next steps Rollout Integration with other systems

61 CCPTS Smartcard based System
Conclusion System has capacity to guide health worker in service delivery and protocol adherence by using decision support tools CCPTS Smartcard based System Produces flexible HMIS data, based on raw data Enables patient information to be available to other services, there by introducing continuity of care, and a continuous medical record

62 CCPTS Smartcard based System
System has capacity to guide health worker in service delivery and protocol adherence by using decision support tools CCPTS Smartcard based System Produces flexible HMIS data, based on raw data Thank You!!! Enables patient information to be available to other services, there by introducing continuity of care, and a continuous medical record


Download ppt "October 2–5, 2007  Lusaka, Zambia"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google