Abstract

Low-resource clinical settings are plagued by low physician-to-patient ratios and a shortage of high-quality medical expertise and infrastructure. Together, these phenomena lead to over-burdened healthcare systems that under-serve the needs of the community. Alleviating this burden can be undertaken by the introduction of clinical decision support systems (CDSSs); systems that support stakeholders (ranging from physicians to patients) within the clinical setting in their day-to-day activities. Such systems, which have proven to be effective in the developed world, remain to be under-explored in low-resource settings. This review attempts to summarize the research focused on clinical decision support systems that either target stakeholders within low-resource clinical settings or diseases commonly found in such environments. When categorizing our findings according to disease applications, we find that CDSSs are predominantly focused on dealing with bacterial infections and maternal care, do not leverage deep learning, and have not been evaluated prospectively. Together, these highlight the need for increased research in this domain in order to impact a diverse set of medical conditions and ultimately improve patient outcomes.

Highlights

  • L OW-resource clinical settings are commonly characterized by two phenomena

  • This review aims to shed light on clinical decision support systems that target stakeholders within low-resource clinical settings or diseases commonly found in such environments

  • The review is meant to encompass developing countries, only 2 of the 20 clinical decision support systems (CDSSs) articles were based in such a country

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Summary

Introduction

L OW-resource clinical settings are commonly characterized by two phenomena. Such physicians, when accessible, operate in an environment that lacks high-quality expertise and medical infrastructure [3]. Combined, these phenomena lead to an overburdened healthcare system that under-serves the needs of the community. These phenomena lead to an overburdened healthcare system that under-serves the needs of the community This can manifest itself in the form of patients left untreated or even worse, poorly treated. Over-burdened healthcare systems, are not limited to low-resource clinical settings. Health systems in developed nations such as the National Health Service (NHS) in the United Kingdom are coming to terms with such a realization [4]

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