Evaluation of electronic health information systems in the Sri Lankan state health sector: a cross sectional study

S. Wijesinghe, N. Liyanaarachchi, M. Silva, L. Siriwardena, S. D. Silva, Y. A. K. E. Samaranayake, A. Jagoda, M. Landry, M. Ortan, K. Mendis, T. Tennakoon
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Abstract

Introduction: Over the past years, the state health sector witnessed the development and deployment of many intuitional based, electronic Health Information Systems (eHIS) in Sri Lanka. These eHIS have been implemented with varying degree of maturity and some show the potential to be scaled-up. However, some initiatives had been limited to pilot implementations and failed to scale up for sub-national to national level. The objectives of the evaluation were to assess the scaling up potential of the eHIS, provide recommendations to the national digital health strategy and enlist the systems in a global digital health marketplace i.e. Digital Health Atlas, for higher visibility and review. Methods: The MAPS toolkit was used as the primary evaluation tool, owing to its strong focus on digital health interventions scale-up. It was mapped with the eleven guiding principles of the National Health Information Policy strategic action plan which was assumed to be the closest available digital health strategy at the time of this evaluation, as there was no explicit digital health strategy for the country. Furthermore, the MAPS toolkit was logically mapped to the Principles for Digital Development for interpretation. The questionnaire was adopted with minor changes to suit local settings and validated by a panel of experts. The tool was administered to the managers of the currently implemented eHIS by three trained Interviewers. Data were randomly verified for quality assurance. Evaluated systems were enlisted in Digital Health Atlas, Sri Lanka country page. Results: 22 data points of 18 exclusive systems participated in the evaluation. Majority of the systems evaluated had a national scope (75%), and a very few projects had a subnational (12.5%) and institutional level scope (12.5%) but implemented at the institutional level. Nearly 60% of them had a financial contribution from the Ministry of Health while 25% had both financial as well as human resources. Nearly 91% of the systems have tested their products for usability with anticipated user groups. Further 86% of the systems had a demonstrated efficacy with 96% stating that the system has demonstrated effectiveness. Therefore, it was assumed that the slow scale-up progress was due to implementation issues rather than usability issues. Majority of the systems had a formal partnership with the Ministry of Health/Government entities. However, the formal partnerships with implementing partners, technology partners and service providers were not up to the standards. The formal partnership with marketing (communications) partner and evaluation (or research) partner was not identified by many systems. Majority of the systems have considered potential economic costs for scaling up the eHealth project. Nearly 46% (22.7% documented) have identified the total cost of ownership over the next five years, to reach their projected scale. Another 46% (18.2% documented) have identified key elements of the cost associated with scaling up the project. With regards to strategic choices regarding partners who offer sustainable funding for scaling up, 41% (9.1% documented) have explored diverse funding streams. However, nearly 59% have not identified and mitigated risks for a transition plan which may have affected the scaling-up. Conclusion: The enterprise-level digital health strategy and blueprint with action plan needs to be finalized to be able to address critical issues related to governance and monitoring of these systems. National level digital health governance mechanism needs to be resumed and re-established. Areas such as mechanisms for expanding human resource capacity and strategies for project team member retention should be strengthened further. A national enterprise level interoperability layer is a grave necessity. The enlisted systems in Digital Health Atlas can be case studies for the global community on Sri Lankan experience.
斯里兰卡国家卫生部门电子卫生信息系统的评估:一项横断面研究
导读:在过去几年中,斯里兰卡国家卫生部门见证了许多基于直觉的电子卫生信息系统(eHIS)的发展和部署。这些eHIS已经实现了不同程度的成熟,其中一些显示出扩大规模的潜力。然而,一些倡议仅限于试点实施,未能扩大到国家以下至国家一级。评估的目标是评估eHIS的扩大潜力,为国家数字卫生战略提供建议,并将这些系统纳入全球数字卫生市场,即数字卫生地图集,以提高可见度和审查。方法:MAPS工具包被用作主要评估工具,因为它非常注重数字卫生干预措施的扩大。它与《国家卫生信息政策战略行动计划》的11项指导原则相结合,该计划被认为是在本次评估时最接近现有的数字卫生战略,因为该国没有明确的数字卫生战略。此外,MAPS工具包在逻辑上与数字发展原则相对应,以便进行解释。调查问卷采用了小的变化,以适应当地的设置,并由专家小组验证。该工具由三名经过培训的采访者管理给目前实施的eHIS的管理人员。数据随机验证以保证质量。评估后的系统被收录在斯里兰卡国家页面的数字健康地图集中。结果:18个排他性系统的22个数据点参与评价。大多数评估的系统具有国家范围(75%),极少数项目具有次国家(12.5%)和机构一级范围(12.5%),但在机构一级实施。其中近60%得到卫生部的财政捐助,25%既有财政资源又有人力资源。近91%的系统已经在预期的用户群中测试了其产品的可用性。此外,86%的系统显示出有效性,96%的系统显示出有效性。因此,可以假定缓慢的扩展进度是由于实现问题而不是可用性问题。大多数系统与卫生部/政府实体建立了正式伙伴关系。但是,与执行伙伴、技术伙伴和服务提供者的正式伙伴关系没有达到标准。许多系统没有确定与营销(通信)伙伴和评估(或研究)伙伴的正式伙伴关系。大多数系统都考虑了扩大电子健康项目的潜在经济成本。近46%(22.7%)的企业已经确定了在未来五年内达到预期规模的总拥有成本。另有46%(18.2%)已经确定了与扩大项目规模相关的关键成本要素。关于为扩大规模提供可持续资金的合作伙伴的战略选择,41%(9.1%)已经探索了不同的资金流。然而,近59%的企业没有确定和减轻可能影响扩大规模的过渡计划的风险。结论:需要最终确定企业级数字医疗战略和行动计划蓝图,以便能够解决与这些系统的治理和监测相关的关键问题。需要恢复和重新建立国家层面的数字卫生治理机制。应进一步加强诸如扩大人力资源能力的机制和挽留项目团队成员的战略等领域。一个国家级的企业级互操作性层是非常必要的。数字健康地图集收录的系统可以作为全球社区关于斯里兰卡经验的案例研究。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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