| Literature DB >> 28582996 |
Vincent M Kiberu1, Maurice Mars, Richard E Scott.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Most developing countries, including Uganda, have embraced the use of e-Health and m-Health applications as a means to improve primary healthcare delivery and public health for their populace. In Uganda, the growth in the information and communications technology industry has benefited the rural communities and also created opportunities for new innovations, and their application into healthcare has reported positive results, especially in the areas of disease control and prevention through disease surveillance. However, most are mere proof-of-concepts, only demonstrated in use within a small context and lack sustainability. This study reviews the literature to understand e-Health's current implementation status within Uganda and documents the barriers and opportunities to sustainable e-Health intervention programmes in Uganda.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28582996 PMCID: PMC5458569 DOI: 10.4102/phcfm.v9i1.1277
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Afr J Prim Health Care Fam Med ISSN: 2071-2928
A summary of articles and reports that met the inclusion criteria.
| Articles, theses, and reports | Author name, year | Findings |
|---|---|---|
| Into Africa: The telemedicine links between Canada, Kenya and Uganda. | House et al. (1987) | Study confirmed that new approaches to education and consultation can effectively be applied through ICT. |
| The Nakaseke multipurpose community telecentre in Uganda. | Mayanja (2001) | A telecentre was designed to provide a test bed for future investment in ICT for rural development. |
| Tele-dermatology web consultation and e-learning project Kampala-Mbarara, Uganda and Graz, Austria. | Kaddu (2007) | Despite being deemed successful, challenges encountered included technical and systems problems, plus economic and cultural limitations. |
| Factors affecting adoption, implementation and sustainability of telemedicine information systems in Uganda. | Isabalija et al. (2011) | Innovations around telemedicine are persistently being hindered by the lack of policy on use of telemedicine, insufficient knowledge and skills among health workers and resistance to change. |
| Feasibility and diagnostic accuracy of Internet-based dynamic telepathology between Uganda and Germany. | Wamala et al. (2011) | Internet-based conferencing systems offer an inexpensive method of obtaining a primary diagnosis by telepathology and consulting on cases that require subspecialty expertise. |
| A framework for designing sustainable telemedicine information systems in developing countries. | Kituyi et al. (2012) | The key requirements for designing sustainable telemedicine information systems in developing countries were identified as the need for speed, ease of use and affordability. |
| Using HMIS for monitoring and planning: The experience of Uganda Catholic Medical Bureau. | Mandelli and Giusti (2005) | The existing HMIS can be used as a tool to monitor the effects of managerial decisions. |
| Creation and evaluation of EMR-based paper clinical summaries to support HIV-care in Uganda, Africa. | Were et al. (2010) | By taking advantage of data stored in EMRs, efficiency and quality of care can be improved through clinical summaries, even in settings with limited resources. |
| Use of an innovative, affordable, and open-source short message service-based tool to monitor malaria in remote areas of Uganda. | Asiimwe et al. (2011) | Use of SMS-based reporting systems have the potential to improve timeliness in reporting of specific, time-sensitive metrics at modest cost, while bypassing current bottlenecks in the flow of data. |
| Electronic medical records and same day patient tracing improves clinic efficiency and adherence to appointments in a community-based HIV/AIDS care programme, in Uganda. | Alamo et al. (2012) | EMR and same day patient tracing can significantly reduce missed appointments (LTFU) and improve clinic efficiency. |
| Review of developing country health information systems. | Foster (2012) | Uganda has strong evidence of planning and implementation of adequate ICT infrastructure for health facilities. |
| A study of the preconditions for a sustainable implementation of a digital health system in Uganda. | Gårdstedt et. al. (2013) | There is no need for sophisticated technologies for Uganda to achieve sustainable ICT projects within healthcare. |
| e-Health at outpatient clinics in Uganda. | Hindemark (2013) | Because of the multitude of non-compatible e-Health projects in Uganda, the report calls for a consolidation of efforts and sharing of information among the e-Health application developers of Uganda. |
| Designing an architecture for secure sharing of personal health records – A case of developing countries. | Ssembatya (2014) | Identity-based encryption can be extended to mobile phones to secure patient health records beyond the hospital server domain. |
| Responding to the human resource crisis: Peer health workers, mobile phones, and HIV care in Rakai, Uganda. AIDS Patient Care. | Chang et al. (2008) | A simple and inexpensive clinical and adherence monitoring intervention leveraging PHWs empowered with mobile phones can successfully be implemented in a rural resource limited setting. |
| m-Health: Mobile phones in HIV prevention in Uganda. | Salomonsson (2010) | Mobile phones can be both feasible and effective in HIV prevention campaigns in east African settings despite structural constraints such as lack of electrical power and illiteracy. |
| Using mobile phones to improve clinic attendance amongst an antiretroviral treatment cohort in rural Uganda: A cross-sectional and prospective study. | Kunutsor et al.(2010) | Mobile phones have a potential for use in resource-constrained settings to substantially improve the clinical management of HIV/AIDs. |
| Using SMS for HIV/AIDS education and to expand the use of HIV testing and counselling services at the AIDS Information Centre (AIC) Uganda. | Hoefman and Apunyu (2010) | Study outcome saw a high acceptance rate of the SMS survey and increase in the number of people accessing HCT. |
| Using personal digital assistants to improve healthcare delivery in Uganda (Doctoral dissertation, Malmo University, Sweden). | Kirunda (2010) | The use of PDAs can improve healthcare delivery in rural health facilities. |
| Impact of an m-Health intervention for peer health workers on AIDS care in rural Uganda: A mixed methods evaluation of a cluster-randomised trial. | Chang et al. (2011) | Interventions for m-Health registered improvements in patient care, logistics and broad support among patients, clinic staff and PHWs. |
| Cell phone usage among adolescents in Uganda: Acceptability for relaying health information. | Mitchell et al. (2011) | Need for effective HIV prevention programmes that can reach large audiences at low cost and are culturally relevant for the Ugandan context. |
| You have an important message! Evaluating the effectiveness of a text message HIV/AIDS campaign in Northwest Uganda. | Chib et al. (2012) | Potential of m-Health tools when extended to millions of mobile phone users as part of an integrated health campaign approach. |
| Mobile phones in health care in Uganda: The Applab study. | Nchise et al. (2012) | A need to integrate a referral system to registered health professionals and their facilities, and the need for education and/or marketing strategy with an indigenous branding to address the misconception of the brand name ‘Google SMS’. |
| m-Health and developing countries: A successful obstetric care model in Uganda. | DeStigter (2012) | Uganda still experiences challenges due to expensive equipment and high electrical power requirements hindering developments in e-Health. |
| Usability testing of a prototype phone oximeter with healthcare providers in high- and low-medical resource environments. | Hudson et al. (2012) | User feedback was positive and the overall usability was high. |
| High acceptability for cell phone text messages to improve communication of laboratory results with HIV-infected patients in rural Uganda: A cross-sectional survey study. | Siedner et al. (2012) | Cell phone text messaging for communication of abnormal laboratory results is highly acceptable in a cohort of HIV-infected patients in rural Uganda. |
| Optimising network connectivity for mobile health technologies in sub-Saharan Africa. | Siedner et al. (2012) | Addition of SMS to standard GPRS cellular network connectivity can significantly reduce network connection failures for mobile health applications in remote areas. |
| Perceptions and acceptability of m-Health interventions for improving patient care at a community-based HIV/AIDS clinic in Uganda: A mixed methods study. | Chang et al. (2013) | Study findings were vital to guide future design and implementation of m-Health interventions in this setting, optimising their chances for success. |
| Cost analyses of PHW and m-Health support interventions for improving AIDS care in Rakai, Uganda. | Chang et al. (2013) | The PHW intervention (m-Health) was found to be cost saving. |
| Vulnerabilities in m-Health implementation: A Ugandan HIV/AIDS SMS campaign. | Chib et al. (2013) | Interactive SMS quiz design motivated recipients with the correct HIV/AIDS knowledge to respond (and thus become eligible for free HIV screening). |
| The role of m-Health in Uganda: A tool to reach development. | Mattsson and Sabuni (2013) | ICT tools such as m-Health were identified. However, collaboration between NGOs and government must exist to build communication and organisational structure. |
| Response patterns to interactive SMS health education quizzes at two sites in Uganda: A cohort study. | Lepper et al. (2013) | Future research should focus on developing evidence-based guidelines for the design, implementation and evaluation of SMS-based interventions. |
| The role of mobile health technologies in improving community health seeking practices in rural Uganda. | Liu and Lin (2014) | Study showed a critical gap in the local healthcare infrastructure that needs to be addressed in order to establish more efficient delivery of healthcare services. |
| A pilot study on mobile phones as a means to access maternal health education in eastern rural Uganda. | Roberts et al. (2014) | Providing local communities with mobile maternal health education offers a new potential method of reducing maternal mortality. |
| Demographic and psychosocial characteristics of mobile phone ownership and usage among youth living in the slums of Kampala, Uganda. | Swahn et al. (2014) | Given that nearly half of the youth own and use phones daily, new research is needed to determine next steps for mobile health (m-Health). |
| A model of e-Health acceptance and usage in Uganda: The perspective of online social networks. | Miiro and Maiga (2014) | A generic social networked model was developed that can be adopted for use by other transitioning countries. |
| Introduction of mobile phones for use by volunteer community health workers in support of integrated Community Case Management (iCCM) in Bushenyi District, Uganda: Development and implementation process. | Tumusiime et al. (2014) | Robust mobile phone–based system may contribute to efficient delivery of iCCM by trained volunteer CHWs in rural settings in Uganda. |
| Application of information and communication technology (ICT) in health information access and dissemination in Uganda. | Omona and Ikoja-Odongo (2006) | All stakeholders in the health sector need to support and promote ICT as the most effective tool for health information access and dissemination. In addition, a number of challenges must be addressed if full benefit of the use and application of ICT is to be realised in Uganda. |
| ICTs and health in Uganda: Benefits, challenges and contradictions. | Litho (2007) | Development in ICTs for health creates opportunities and benefits for Uganda to step up and embrace sophisticated modes of healthcare delivery. |
| Information and communication technology and community-based health sciences training in Uganda: Perceptions and experiences of educators and students. | Chang et al. (2012) | Internet access in rural educational sites is still lacking, but students and educators appear eager to utilise this resource if availability improves. |
| A framework for sustainable implementation of e-medicine in transitioning countries. | Isabalija et al. (2013) | e-Medicine sustainability in sub-Saharan Africa is affected by institutional factors. |
| Understanding ICT behaviours among health workers in sub-Saharan Africa: A cross-sectional study for laboratory persons in Uganda. | Kasusse et al. (2014) | It is viable/feasible to pilot informatics projects as strategies to build bridges and develop skills for an e-Health landscape in laboratory services with a bigger financial muscle. |
| A structured approach for evaluating ICT contributions to development. PhD Thesis. Stockholm University, Faculty of Social Sciences, Department of Computer and Systems Sciences. Makerere University, Uganda. | Kivunike (2015) | Proposes a model and criteria for the evaluation of ICT-related development, recommends complementary qualitative and quantitative approaches and proposes indicators to appropriately evaluate the ICT contribution to development. |
| National Health Policy: Reducing poverty through promoting people’s health. | Ministry of Health-Uganda (2009) | Government of Uganda official policy document. |
| Health Sector Strategic Investment Plan III. | Ministry of Health-Uganda, (2010) | The health sector strategic plan three for the period 2010/11–2014/15. |
| The Second National Health Policy: Promoting people’s health to enhance social-economic development. | Ministry of Health-Uganda, (2010) | Government policy document about the health sector in Uganda. |
| Computerised and integrated human resource information system. | Ministry of Health-Uganda, (2011) | Government policy document about human resources in health. |
| Uganda Health System Assessment. | Ministry of Health-Uganda (2011) | A report on the five health systems building blocks of the healthcare system in Uganda. |
CHWs, community healthcare workers; EMRs, electronic medical records; HCT, HIV counselling and testing; HMIS, Health Management Information System; LTFU, loss to follow-up; NGO, non-government organisation; PDA, personal digital assistants; PHWs, peer health workers.