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Implementing OpenMRS Medical Record System in an AIDS treatment program in Uganda Daniel Kayiwa. About me. Was born in Central Uganda. Worked for three years at Makerere University as a Software Developer. Makerere University is in Kampala, the capital city of Uganda. Outline. Introduction
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Implementing OpenMRS Medical Record System in an AIDS treatment program in UgandaDaniel Kayiwa
About me • Was born in Central Uganda. • Worked for three years at Makerere University as a Software Developer. • Makerere University is in Kampala, the capital city of Uganda.
Outline • Introduction • Challenges faced • Electronic Medical Record System • OpenMRS • Experience with OpenMRS • Future work
HIV Treatment • Free ARVs for HIV Positive patients. • Monthly clinic visits. • Paper forms are filled and stored.
Problems of HIV Treatment • Huge pile of paper records that were almost not used for any kind of analysis or reporting. • Tracking Lost follow-up patients • Late reports • Questionable reports
Preliminary Steps • WHO collaborated with MOH. • Makerere University FCIT was selected to give technical support for three sites each having an average of 5,000 patients. • OpenMRS was selected for its flexibility and being open source. • Cross-site meetings to ensure data sharing. • New paper forms were created and existing ones were modified to make them better for analysis.
Current Status • A huge number of electronic patient records, which is attracting research efforts. • Standard reports generated by just a click of a button. • Advanced users are being trained in SQL in order to create non built in reports.
Successes • Less time to produce reports. • Better quality and more reports. • Lost follow-up patients can be tracked. • Provides not just support for the AIDs treatment program but also daily clinic care. • A big dataset ready for research purposes.
Challenges • Unreliable power. • Rigidity to change. • Job loss fear. • Increased workload fear. • Confidentiality issues with data entry clerks. • Lack of skills. • Integrating with existing legacy systems. • Not all expectations were met. • Reporting was complex due to the system data model.
Lessons Learnt • Build local capacity for technical support. • Not to expect a perfect world but look for overall improvement. • Collect only enough data but not too much. • Avoid qualifications you cannot pay for.
Work in progress • Support for PDAs and Mobile Phones to help in following up patients in remote areas.