| Literature DB >> 26321475 |
Julia Driessen1, Dykki Settle2, David Potenziani3, Kate Tulenko4, Twaha Kabocho5, Ismail Wadembere6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: To address the need for timely and comprehensive human resources for health (HRH) information, governments and organizations have been actively investing in electronic health information interventions, including in low-resource settings. The economics of human resources information systems (HRISs) in low-resource settings are not well understood, however, and warrant investigation and validation. CASE DESCRIPTION: This case study describes Uganda's Human Resources for Health Information System (HRHIS), implemented with support from the US Agency for International Development, and documents perceptions of its impact on the health labour market against the backdrop of the costs of implementation. Through interviews with end users and implementers in six different settings, we document pre-implementation data challenges and consider how the HRHIS has been perceived to affect human resources decision-making and the healthcare employment environment. DISCUSSION AND EVALUATION: This multisite case study documented a range of perceived benefits of Uganda's HRHIS through interviews with end users that sought to capture the baseline (or pre-implementation) state of affairs, the perceived impact of the HRHIS and the monetary value associated with each benefit. In general, the system appears to be strengthening both demand for health workers (through improved awareness of staffing patterns) and supply (by improving licensing, recruitment and competency of the health workforce). This heightened ability to identify high-value employees makes the health sector more competitive for high-quality workers, and this elevation of the health workforce also has broader implications for health system performance and population health.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26321475 PMCID: PMC4553943 DOI: 10.1186/s12960-015-0036-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Resour Health ISSN: 1478-4491
Description of case study sites
| Site | iHRIS application(s) | Charge | Primary data-related functions |
|---|---|---|---|
| Allied Health Professionals Council (AHPC) | Qualify | Regulate and control practice, education and training of allied health professionals through registration, licensing, supervision and monitoring | Registration of new graduates, annual licence renewals, registration and inspection of facilities and clinics |
| Health Tutors College (HTC) | Train | Offer postgraduate training to candidates who already hold diplomas or degrees in one of the approved nurses, midwifery and allied related specialties, with the goal of creating well-informed and effective tutors | Tracking of progress on curriculum implementation and student performance; collection of information on faculty, tutors and training experience of individual health workers |
| Ministry of Health Human Resources Development (HRD) | Train | Manage all matters related to HRH policy and strategic framework that relate to training based on the training needs assessment and planning of the health workforce | Coordination of in-service training |
| Ministry of Health Human Resources Management (HRM) | Manage | Identify and manage HRH needs; project HRH supply | Determination of staffing levels and recruitment planning, performance management and appraisals, promotions and retirement management and succession of the country’s healthcare workforce |
| Uganda Nurses and Midwives Examination Board (UNMEB) | Train | Streamline, regulate and coordinate examinations and awards for nurses and midwives in Uganda | Management of practical exams; generation of examination cards, student albums, individual certificates and results record books; generation of examination data |
| Uganda Protestant Medical Bureau (UPMB) | Manage | Support Protestant churches involved in provision of health services | Management, planning and development of UPMB health workforce |
Value of efficiency gains for Allied Health Professionals Council (AHPC) licence renewals (for 100 renewals)
| Function | Unit cost | Impact | Total cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Registrant’s record retrieval | $0.91/h | 4 h and 50 min per record | $439.83 |
| Total | $439.83 | ||
Value of efficiency gains for Ministry of Health’s Human Resources Management (HRM) report generation
| Function | Unit cost | Impact | Total cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Report preparation | $8.73/day | 79.97 days | $697.82 |
| Other costs (photocopying, printing, telephone calls, postage, incidentals) | $698.08 | 1 | $698.08 |
| Total | $1395.90 | ||
Value of efficiency gains for Ministry of Health Human Resources Development (HRD) annual report generation
| Function | Unit cost | Impact | Total cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Report preparation | $8.73/day | 39.5 days | $344.68 |
| Other costs (photocopying, printing, telephone calls, postage, incidentals) | $698.08 | 1 | $698.08 |
| Total | $1042.76 | ||
Summary of implementation costs
| AHPC | HTC | HRDa | HRMa | UNMEB | UPMB | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hardware | $977 | $1920 | $1850 | $2199 | $1117 | |
| Software installation and network costs | $768 | $698 | $873 | $593 | $768 | |
| Training | $4887 | $1326 | $1990 | $1082 | $1501 | $2443 |
| Data entry and cleaning | $880 | $817 | $775 | $775 | $775 | $859 |
| Technical follow-up | $440 | $440 | $405 | $405 | $405 | $405 |
| Total | $7951 | $5201 | $4530 | $3623 | $5473 | $5592 |
aHRD and HRM share a server