| Literature DB >> 28183341 |
Martin Njoroge1, Dejan Zurovac2,3,4, Esther A A Ogara5, Jane Chuma2, Doris Kirigia2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The growth of Information and Communication Technology in Kenya has facilitated implementation of a large number of eHealth projects in a bid to cost-effectively address health and health system challenges. This systematic review aims to provide a situational analysis of eHealth initiatives being implemented in Kenya, including an assessment of the areas of focus and geographic distribution of the health projects. The search strategy involved peer and non-peer reviewed sources of relevant information relating to projects under implementation in Kenya. The projects were examined based on strategic area of implementation, health purpose and focus, geographic location, evaluation status and thematic area.Entities:
Keywords: Evaluation; Health equity; Health information systems; Kenya; Telemedicine; eHealth; mHealth
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28183341 PMCID: PMC5301342 DOI: 10.1186/s13104-017-2416-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Res Notes ISSN: 1756-0500
Search strategy used
(Source: authors’ synthesis)
| Step | Description |
|---|---|
| 1 | Peer reviewed sources of information: MEDLINE, Embase, Web of Science, Econlit, SocIndex, Toc Premier, Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, INASP, LISTA, EBSCOhost, Directory of Open Access Journals, Google Scholar |
| 2 | Non-peer reviewed sources of information: Africa-wide information, newspapers(Nation and Standard), organizational reports (WHO, m-health alliance, IDRC) |
| 3 | Web-portals for eHealth projects in Kenya |
| 4 | Profit and not- for-profit organizational websites |
| 5 | Blogs and other networks |
| 6 | Personal communication with implementers |
| 7 | Hand searches of references in included documents |
Fig. 1Search results.
Source: authors’ synthesis
Fig. 2Distribution of eHealth projects in Kenya by urbanization. Map A consisting of all the eHealth projects under implementation in 47 counties in Kenya. Map shows geographical locations of all eHealth initiatives categorised by strategic area of implementation and national projects. Map background is divided according to percentage of urbanization (see colour bars) and the number of counties in square brackets. Map B (Inset) Nairobi County (capital city) and neighbouring counties.
Source: authors’ synthesis. No data permission was required
Fig. 3Distribution of eHealth projects in Kenya by marginalisation. Map A demonstrates eHealth projects in Kenya based on counties and categorised by strategic area of implementation and national projects. Map background is coloured according to county marginalisation as defined by CRA (see colour bars). Map B (Inset) highlights Kisumu, Vihiga, Kakamega, Siaya and neighbouring counties.
Source: authors’ synthesis. No data permission was required
Summary of the characteristics of eHealth projects in Kenya
(Source: authors’ synthesis)
| Strategic area of implementation | N = 69 |
|---|---|
| mHealth | 47 (69%) |
| Health information systems | 9 (13%) |
| eLearning | 8 (11%) |
| Telemedicine | 5 (7%) |
| Thematic area | |
| Client education and behaviour change communication | 22 (32%) |
| Data collection and reporting | 13 (19%) |
| Provider training and education | 6 (9%) |
| Financial transactions and incentives | 6 (9%) |
| Electronic health records | 5 (7%) |
| Provider-to-provider communication: user groups, consultation | 5 (7%) |
| Supply chain management | 4 (5%) |
| Other thematic areasa | 8 (12%) |
| Health focus and purpose | |
| Primary care | 19 (28%) |
| HIV/AIDS | 17 (25%) |
| Maternal and child health | 11 (16%) |
| Malaria | 7 (10%) |
| Health financing | 4 (5%) |
| Drug supply | 4 (5%) |
| Other purposesb | 7 (10%) |
| Evaluation status | |
| Not reported | 41 (59%) |
| Feasibility and acceptability studies | 9 (13%) |
| Randomised controlled trial | 8 (12%) |
| Cross-sectional study | 6 (9%) |
| Qualitative study | 3 (4%) |
| Cohort study | 1 (1%) |
| Non-randomised intervention study | 1 (1%) |
aThe other thematic areas are sensors and point-of-care diagnostics (2; 3%), registries and vital events tracking (2; 3%), electronic decision support (2; 3%), provider work planning and scheduling (1; 1%) and human resource management (1; 1%)
bThe other health purposes are reproductive health (2; 3%), cancer care (1; 1%), tuberculosis (1; 1%), yellow fever and rift valley fever (1; 1%), eye care (1; 1%) and epilepsy care (1; 1%)