| Literature DB >> 23281735 |
Rajesh Khanna1, N Karikalan, Anil Kumar Mishra, Anchal Agarwal, Madhulekha Bhattacharya, Jayanta K Das.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Quality and essential health information is considered one of the most cost-effective interventions to improve health for a developing country. Healthcare portals have revolutionalized access to health information and knowledge using the Internet and related technologies, but their usage is far from satisfactory in India. This article describes a health portal developed in India aimed at providing one-stop access to efficiently search, organize and share maternal child health information relevant from public health perspective in the country.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23281735 PMCID: PMC3546074 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-13-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Detailed in-house assessment of health portals
| 1. | WHO-India Digital Repository | The Institutional Repository is an archive of WHO documents & resource materials from the WHO Country office India. | Free | No | Full text available and is divided into sections. | WHO resource materials on health | Professionals looking for WHO resource materials. | The information is divided into number of communities and sub-communities (or categories) | Limited information in every community. |
| Main communities include Communicable diseases and disease surveillance, Family and Child Health, Health action in crisis, Health systems development, Immunization and Vaccinedevelopment, Non-communicable diseases and Mental health, Resources for staff members, Sustainable development | Materials limited to those developed by WHO only. | ||||||||
| No specific category for Child health. | |||||||||
| 2. | National Health Information Collaboration (NHIC) | NHIC is a collaborative model whereby the information is entered by authorized institutions and personnel from 18 organizations trained for the purpose. | Free | No | Full text available | Total of about 1800 entries (except Directories) out of which more than 1500 are scientific articles and thesis. | Research scientists, Healthcare professionals and Policy makers. | Since nformation is submitted through the authorized content providers only, limited resource materials or subject specific materials have been uploaded | First version and currently being updated. |
| Classification based on Topics (all public health related) and types of information. | Child and adolescent health has 60 entries with 50 being scientific articles. | ||||||||
| Types include Scientific publications, Education & management, IT applications, Research projects & funding, Policies & practices, Stat data & Directory of resources. | |||||||||
| 3. | Policy Reforms Option Database (HS-PROD) | Database is regulated by | Free | Optional | No, only the summary of the case studies is available. | Health sector reforms – successful examples from the field and innovative ideas | Government of India Health and Family Welfare staff at central, state and district levels, health related NGOs, private sector providers, development partners (including donors) and academic institutions. | The information is provided using a standard format. | Includes case studies and innovative ideas on health sector reforms only. |
| This group approve each entry before inclusion and meet quarterly to oversee progress. | Topics include Infrastructure, Logistics, Financial management, M&E, PPP, Management structures & systems, Social marketing, Health financing, Human resources, Urban health, Community participation, FRU, BCC | No separate topic on child health | |||||||
| 4. | NGO Gateway | A website supported by NACO and UNAIDS. | Free | No | Yes | HIV/AIDS | Seeks to empower NGO sector through networking and capacity building by leveraging internet technologies. | It’s difficult to locate the documents for a new user. | Contains information related to HIV/AIDS only. |
| Almost 1000 digital resources are present which have been categorized into Statistics/Data, Laws and Policy Documents, Information Resources, Tools, Funding Opportunities, and Declarations | |||||||||
Monthly distribution of key performance indicators of repository (July 2010 – December 2011)
| | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 540 | 336 | 52.96 | 1640 | 3.04 | 4.38 | 19.63 | 51.48 | 28.89 | |
| 537 | 379 | 24.95 | 5543 | 10.32 | 11.14 | 28.12 | 44.88 | 27.00 | |
| 1413 | 1144 | 21.94 | 8217 | 5.82 | 4.40 | 34.89 | 37.08 | 27.95 | |
| 1754 | 1486 | 37.29 | 9184 | 5.24 | 5.45 | 59.18 | 23.60 | 17.22 | |
| 2084 | 1782 | 44.00 | 9931 | 4.77 | 6.23 | 60.60 | 18.28 | 21.11 | |
| 2454 | 2094 | 44.25 | 11540 | 4.70 | 3.57 | 69.15 | 16.87 | 13.98 | |
| 3105 | 2672 | 46.28 | 12651 | 4.07 | 3.47 | 69.86 | 14.98 | 15.17 | |
| 2694 | 2313 | 43.10 | 11047 | 4.10 | 3.39 | 67.45 | 16.26 | 16.30 | |
| 3055 | 2638 | 45.17 | 11605 | 3.80 | 4.03 | 62.09 | 16.82 | 21.08 | |
| 2903 | 2382 | 40.61 | 11428 | 3.94 | 4.18 | 52.26 | 27.49 | 20.25 | |
| 3704 | 3048 | 37.53 | 15677 | 4.23 | 4.44 | 51.00 | 27.89 | 21.11 | |
| 3470 | 2911 | 38.70 | 16775 | 4.83 | 5.05 | 52.28 | 26.83 | 20.89 | |
| 3496 | 2882 | 40.53 | 14951 | 4.28 | 4.38 | 56.09 | 22.77 | 21.14 | |
| 4045 | 3238 | 18.02 | 25757 | 6.37 | 3.55 | 71.52 | 16.84 | 11.64 | |
| 4339 | 3476 | 9.33 | 33800 | 7.79 | 4.28 | 73.75 | 17.67 | 8.58 | |
| 4457 | 3584 | 6.87 | 33094 | 7.43 | 4.35 | 73.27 | 17.59 | 9.13 | |
| 4568 | 3690 | 4.93 | 30572 | 6.69 | 3.33 | 79.09 | 12.94 | 7.97 | |
| 4180 | 3422 | 5.69 | 29240 | 7.00 | 3.57 | 82.22 | 11.65 | 6.12 | |
| 52798 | 43477 | 27.65 | 292,652 | 5.54 | 4.26 | 64.81 | 19.96 | 15.23 | |
Figure 1Displays the monthly trend of number of visits and number of absolute unique visitors during the 18 month period. It was observed that there was a consistent increase in the number of visits and the number of unique visitors during this time. While the number of visits and unique visitors during July 2010 were 540 and 336 respectively (first month after launch), the figures rose to 2454 and 2100 after 6 months, to 3500 and 2900 at 1 year, and to 4200 and 3400 respectively at 18 months.
Figure 2Shows the monthly distribution of the bounce rate. There was an initial decrease in the bounce rate during the early part of the 18 month period followed by an increase which however again decreased during the latter half of the reporting period. The relevant monthly figures during the last 4 months were all less than 10%.
Association of number of absolute unique visitors with other key performance indicators
| Bounce rate | 50.132 | −0.008 | 0.505 | −2.337 | 0.033 |
| Page view per visit | 5.200 | 0.000 | 0.063 | 0.252 | 0.804 |
| Avg. time on site | 7.071 | −0.001 | 0.585 | −2.889 | 0.011 |
| Search engine | 25.192 | 0.014 | 0.840 | 6.196 | 0.000 |
2x2 Table displaying the agreement between two external reviewers
| External 1 | Yes | 22 | 6 | 28 |
| No | 1 | 20 | 21 | |
| Total | 23 | 26 | 49 | |
Value of Cohen’s Kappa Statistics: 0.72.
Figure 3Theory of change for repository role in improving maternal child health.