Abstract

BackgroundOne of the key mandates of the World Health Organization (WHO) is to develop guidelines, defined as “a document containing recommendations for clinical practice or public health policy.” Guidelines represent the global standard for information sources shaping clinical practice and public health policies. Despite the rigorous development process and the value of guidelines for setting standards, implementing such standards within local contexts and at the point of care is a well-documented challenge. Digital technologies enable agile information management and may facilitate the adaptation of guidelines to diverse settings of health services delivery.ObjectiveThe objective of this paper is to detail the systematic and iterative process involved in transforming the WHO Antenatal Care (ANC) guidelines into a digital decision-support and patient-record application for routine use in primary health care settings, known as the WHO digital ANC module.MethodsThe WHO convened a team of clinical and digital health experts to develop the WHO digital ANC module as a tool to assist health care professionals in the implementation of WHO evidence-based recommendations for pregnant women. The WHO digital ANC module’s creation included the following steps: defining a minimum viable product (MVP), developing clinical workflows and algorithms, algorithm testing, developing a data dictionary, and the creation of a user interface or application development. The overall process of development took approximately 1 year to reach a stable prototype and to finalize the underlying content requirements of the data dictionary and decision support algorithms.ResultsThe first output is a reference software reflecting the generic WHO ANC guideline content, known as the WHO digital ANC module. Within it, all actionable ANC recommendations have related data fields and algorithms to confirm whether the associated task was performed. WHO recommendations that are not carried out by the health care worker are saved as pending tasks on a woman’s health record, and those that are adequately fulfilled trigger messages with positive reinforcement. The second output consists of the structured documentation of the different components which contributed to the development of the WHO digital ANC module, such as the data dictionary and clinical decision support workflows.ConclusionsThis is a novel approach to facilitate the adoption and adaptation of recommendations through digital systems at the health service delivery level. It is expected that the WHO digital ANC module will support the implementation of evidence-based practices and provide information for monitoring and surveillance; however, further evidence is needed to understand how the WHO digital ANC module impacts the implementation of WHO recommendations. Further, the module’s implementation will inform the WHO’s ongoing efforts to create a pathway to adaptive and integrated (Smart) Guidelines in Digital Systems to improve health system quality, coverage, and accountability.

Highlights

  • One of the key mandates of the World Health Organization (WHO) is to develop guidelines, defined as “a document containing recommendations for clinical practice or public health policy” [1]

  • The second output consists of the structured documentation of the different components which contributed to the development of the WHO digital Antenatal Care (ANC) module, such as the data dictionary and clinical decision support workflows

  • It is expected that the WHO digital ANC module will support the implementation of evidence-based practices and provide information for monitoring and surveillance; further evidence is needed to understand how the WHO digital ANC module impacts the implementation of WHO recommendations

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Summary

Introduction

One of the key mandates of the World Health Organization (WHO) is to develop guidelines, defined as “a document containing recommendations for clinical practice or public health policy” [1]. Despite the rigorous development process and the value of guidelines for setting standards, applying global recommendations within local contexts and at the point of care is a well-documented challenge [2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9]. These challenges arise from both systemic issues (such as a lack of supplies, poor staff training, excessive workload, high staff turnover, lack of quality data collection, and difficulty monitoring clinical practice [7]) and barriers in accessing and interpreting recommendations during routine clinical and public health practice. Digital technologies enable agile information management and may facilitate the adaptation of guidelines to diverse settings of health services delivery

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