Saptarshi Purkayastha , Director R &D, HISP India

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Saptarshi Purkayastha, Director R &D, HISP India Brajesh Murari, Senior Software Developer, HISP India Technological Challenges and Approaches to Deploying Mobile Technologies for Public Health Information Systems

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Technological Challenges and Approaches to Deploying Mobile Technologies for Public Health Information Systems. Saptarshi Purkayastha , Director R &D, HISP India Brajesh Murari, Senior Software Developer, HISP India. Health Information Systems Programme (HISP). - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Saptarshi Purkayastha , Director R &D, HISP India

Page 1: Saptarshi Purkayastha ,  Director R &D, HISP India

Saptarshi Purkayastha, Director R &D, HISP India

Brajesh Murari, Senior Software Developer, HISP India

Technological Challenges and Approaches to Deploying Mobile Technologies for Public Health Information Systems

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The Health Information Systems Programme is a global south-south-north collaborative network of researchers, governments, health-care professionals and academic institutions.

Initated by and coordinated from the Global Infrastructures Research Group at Department of Informatics, the network has since 1994 been involved in many countries in "Global South".

Our aim is better health care in developing countries through the combination of research on and implementation of Health Information Systems.

Global Partners include Health Metrics Network, WHO, OpenMRS, Norad and many in-country partners in every implementation country.

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The presentation explores significant potential of mobile in HIS Community-based Monitoring Reporting Health-record information Feedback to health-service providers Strengthen communication between health providers and patients and

community

Also acknowledges many challenges as well to implement mobile technologies in resource

We present: A review of how technology was selected among already available solutions Creating a simple technology solution Implementing an m-Health solution not as an independent application Feedback of health workers on using the application Learnings from the study

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Low-resources communities are not only economically poor, but generally have a huge burden of health-care provisioning

Low-resource also has poorly trained health staff

In technology terms, low-resource settings Limited /Weak/Slow wireless networks Price Sensitivity of phones Lack of Electricity and other infrastructure Low Technology Skills

Mobile phones in these low-resource settings are: Limited processing power Small screen size Limited visualization Limited memory Clinics

!

Health Care

Burden

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Allows transmitting facility-level data for all kinds of health programs and dataset including routine, surveillance, survey data for quarterly, monthly, weekly or daily periods

Works on lowest cost Java-enabled phones (Rs. 2000+) Low operating cost (3-4 SMS/month – <Rs. 10/month) Forms have pages similar to paper forms Mobile application in local language Integrated with state HMIS and reporting mechanisms

ANM at Subcentre

Block

Computerized PHC

PHC

Feed-back

Mobile

Phone

GSM GatewaySERVER

GSM Gatewa

ySERVE

R

1122

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Mobile phones provided by NHSRC under NRHM and SIM cards purchased by state

Mobile-SCDRT was implemented in 5 blocks in 5 states of different geographies, social structures and different health indicators Himachal Pradesh (Hamirpur Dist – Sujanpur Block) Kerala (Trivandrum Dist - Vizhinjam CHC Area/Athiyanur Block ) Gujarat (Navsari Dist - Chikli Block) Rajasthan (Jaipur Dist – Govindgarh Block) Nagaland (Peren Dist – Jalukie Block)

25+ training sessions, 220+ health-staff trained Health workers trained on using mobile application by

NHSRC, state and dist data managers, data managers and officers trained for analysis

Refresher training after 6-months of usage to monitor and improve the application

Data collection through questionnaires, interviews and official health system feedback.

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Question Response1.) Did you get mobile phone with the sub-centre form? 100% YES (167)

2.) Did you fill monthly report on mobile and send the SMS? 100% YES (167)

3.) Is the form on the mobile phone as the one given to you? 82% YES (139)18% NO (28) – No linelisting

4.) Were you oriented on new forms? 90% YES (151)10% NO (16) – No training from state

5.) How did you find filling the form on the mobile phone? a) 94% EASY (157)b) 5% NOT EASY (8) – No localizationc) 1% DIFFICULT (2) – No training manual

6.) Can you fill the form on the mobile phone independently? 99% YES (165)1% NO (2) – Retiring, Will not fill the form

7.) Do you think sending sub-centre report through mobile phone help your work?

100% YES (167)

8.) Do you think it will help to send all reports through mobile phone 100% YES (167)

9.) Could you easily read the form on the mobile phone 93% YES (156)7% NO (11) – Localization / element number

10.) How do you think mobile phone can be made more useful to you GENERAL QUESTION:

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Questions are welcomed

We need support from developers who understand J2ME programming to scale the implementation. Please visit: http://hispindia.org Or write to: [email protected] or

[email protected]