Abstract

BackgroundHealth information systems are crucial to provide data for decision-making and demand for data is constantly growing. However, the link between data and decisions is not always rational or linear and the management of data ends up overloading frontline health workers, which may compromise quality of healthcare delivery. Despite limited evidence, there is an increasing push for the digitalization of health information systems, which poses enormous challenges, particularly in remote, rural settings in low- and middle-income countries. Paper-based tools will continue to be used in combination with digital solutions and this calls for efforts to make them more responsive to local needs. Paper-based Health Information Systems in Comprehensive Care (PHISICC) is a transdisciplinary, multi-country research initiative to create and test innovative paper-based health information systems in three sub-Saharan African countries.Methods/DesignThe PHISICC initiative is being carried out in remote, rural settings in Côte d’Ivoire, Mozambique and Nigeria through partnership with ministries of health and research institutions. We began with research syntheses to acquire the most up-to-date knowledge on health information systems. These were coupled with fieldwork in the three countries to understand the current design, patterns and contexts of use, and healthcare worker perspectives. Frontline health workers, with designers and researchers, used co-creation methods to produce the new PHISICC tools. This suite of tools is being tested in the three countries in three cluster-randomized controlled trials. Throughout the project, we have engaged with a wide range of stakeholders and have maintained the highest scientific standards to ensure that results are relevant to the realities in the three countries.DiscussionWe have deployed a comprehensive research approach to ensure the robustness and future policy uptake of findings. Besides the innovative PHISICC paper-based tools, our process is in itself innovative. Rather than emphasizing the technical dimensions of data management, we focused instead on frontline health workers’ data use and decision-making. By tackling the whole scope of primary healthcare areas rather than a subset of them, we have developed an entirely new design and visual language for a suite of tools across healthcare areas. The initiative is being tested in remote, rural areas where the most vulnerable live.

Highlights

  • Health information systems are crucial to provide data for decision-making and demand for data is constantly growing

  • Rather than emphasizing the technical dimensions of data management, we focused instead on frontline health workers’ data use and decision-making

  • The main aims of Paper-based Health Information Systems in Comprehensive Care (PHISICC) are to create an innovative health information systems (HIS) for primary healthcare (PHC) and to assess its effectiveness with regard to data use and quality, quality of healthcare and healthcare worker perceptions about the new tools, applied in rural settings in Côte d’Ivoire, Mozambique and Nigeria

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Summary

Discussion

Research on health systems is challenging due to the complexity of the systems, the limited knowledge of their functioning, the influence of contextual issues and the diverse nature of evidence that comes into play, such as evidence on health outcomes, behaviours or finances [1]. The experimental study design will ensure that PHISICC findings are sufficiently robust to be incorporated in future systematic reviews [43] and guidance development [44, 45]. The PHISICC paper tools intervention has been designed for all healthcare areas delivered in PHC services (i.e. antenatal care, delivery, vaccination, etc.), not siloed within one or two areas [46, 47]. This is important because, as we already realized, interactions between different healthcare areas unveil extraordinary new challenges and opportunities that remain unseen when research is limited to just one particular area. Early learnings from PHISICC suggest that there is no real conflict between paper and digital systems and that the future will likely require mixed systems combining the benefits of both paper-based and digital tools

Background
Methods/Design
11 Secure outcomes
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