Literature DB >> 20819259

Piloting the use of personal digital assistants for tuberculosis and human immunodeficiency virus surveillance, Kenya, 2007.

A F Auld1, N Wambua, J Onyango, B Marston, G Namulanda, M Ackers, T Oluoch, A Karisa, A Hightower, R W Shiraishi, A Nakashima, J Sitienei.   

Abstract

SETTING: Improved documentation of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) testing and care among tuberculosis (TB) patients is needed to strengthen TB-HIV programs. In 2007, Kenya piloted the use of personal digital assistants (PDAs) instead of paper registers to collect TB-HIV surveillance data from TB clinics.
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the acceptability, data quality and usefulness of PDAs.
DESIGN: We interviewed four of 31 district coordinators who collected data in PDAs for patients initiating TB treatment from April to June 2007. In 10 of 93 clinics, we randomly selected patient records for comparison with corresponding records in paper registers or PDAs. Using Cochran-Mantel-Haenszel tests, we compared missing data proportions in paper registers with PDAs. We evaluated PDA usefulness by analyzing PDA data from all 93 clinics.
RESULTS: PDAs were well accepted. Patient records were more frequently missing (28/97 vs. 1/112, P < 0.001) and data fields more frequently incomplete (148/1449 vs. 167/2331, P = 0.03) in PDAs compared with paper registers. PDAs, however, facilitated clinic-level analyses: 48/93 (52%) clinics were not reaching the targets of testing >or=80% of TB patients for HIV, and 8 (9%) clinics were providing <80% of TB-HIV co-infected patients with cotrimoxazole (CTX).
CONCLUSION: PDAs had high rates of missing data but helped identify clinics that were undertesting for HIV or underprescribing CTX.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20819259

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Tuberc Lung Dis        ISSN: 1027-3719            Impact factor:   2.373


  3 in total

Review 1.  Mobile technologies and geographic information systems to improve health care systems: a literature review.

Authors:  José António Nhavoto; Ake Grönlund
Journal:  JMIR Mhealth Uhealth       Date:  2014-05-08       Impact factor: 4.773

2.  Challenges and opportunities of a paperless baseline survey in Sri Lanka.

Authors:  Duleeka W Knipe; Melissa Pearson; Rasmus Borgstrøm; Ravi Pieris; Manjula Weerasinghe; Chamil Priyadarshana; Michael Eddleston; David Gunnell; Chris Metcalfe; Flemming Konradsen
Journal:  BMC Res Notes       Date:  2014-07-15

3.  Interventions to improve district-level routine health data in low-income and middle-income countries: a systematic review.

Authors:  Jieun Lee; Caroline A Lynch; Lauren Oliveira Hashiguchi; Robert W Snow; Naomi D Herz; Jayne Webster; Justin Parkhurst; Ngozi A Erondu
Journal:  BMJ Glob Health       Date:  2021-06
  3 in total

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