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MHIS – Port Elizabeth. a collaborative project to extend health information to the point of care. Mobile Health Information System. identify need identify content to meet need identify delivery device identify delivery service train users train support system evaluate impact.
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MHIS – Port Elizabeth a collaborative project to extend health information to the point of care
Mobile Health Information System • identify need • identify content to meet need • identify delivery device • identify delivery service • train users • train support system • evaluate impact
Study questions: does access to quality health and medical information at the point of care improve practice? can we make the provision of quality information at the point of care affordable, accessible and relevant? do cell phones provide a viable option for the delivery of content for use at the point of care ? will nurses use information on a cell phone to improve their work?
Put a mobile library of local and international content on a cell phone and update that content regularly; allow nurses to access other content via the web and email; cap monthly usage (costs).
Needs assessment conducted – over 700 responses – top issues: • extreme multiple drug resistant tuberculosis (TB) (76.4%) • HIV/AIDS (72.8%) • multiple drug resistant TB (72.1%) • ARV (71.2%) • PMTCT (53%) • non-communicable diseases/ chronic diseases of lifestyle (52.2%) • STIs (43.4%), Malaria (42.6%), public health legislation (40.4%)
nurses access: content web email sms voice updates and new content guide server
Clinical content identified, packaged (GUIDE) • 50 PEHC nurses trained • IT dept staff trained • Refresher training • Tech/User Support - 3-tier model (peer-to-peer, - weekly meetings, IT support, MTN and ADE-SATELLIFE)
Content converted to mobile format and organized for ease of use
Evaluation(Conducted by NMMU, Nursing Sciences Department – Dr. Ricks et al) 73% of nurses aged 45-60 years 68% with little or no computer training
89% reported improved nursing practice through information access
81% found it extremely easy to easy to find and read content on the mobile device
100% will continue to use cell phone post project 92% said it was helpful to carry the phone to access content while at work 92% would be willing to buy their own phone 82% felt their practice improved cost elements: smart phone air time training content conversion local server and internet access evaluation program management
Partners: • AED-SATELLIFE • Port Elizabeth Hospital Complex • South Africa Partners • Qualcomm • Department of Health for the Eastern Cape • Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University • MTN-South Africa
Health care workers want and use content to improve decision making • Cell phones are viable delivery tools and the cell network can deliver customized content • Next Steps: • Expand to the full province • Use cell phones to collect data and provide continuing education, job aids and reference tools hladd@aed.org