Title: Operationalizing eHealth in subSaharan Africa the Role of WHOAFRO
1Operationalizing eHealth in sub-Saharan
Africathe Role of WHO/AFRO
- E. Asamoah-Odei
- Medical Officer
- WHO/AFRO
2WHO Definition eHealth
-
- eHealth or Telemedicine is defined as
- the delivery of health services, where
distance is a critical factor, by all health
professionals using information and communication
technologies for the exchange of valid
information for diagnosis, treatment and
prevention of diseases and injuries, research and
evaluation, and for the continuing education of
health care providers, all in the interests of
advancing the health of individuals and their
communities
3How can eHealth contribute to the strengthening
of health systems? (1)
- Health information at the point of care
- Map of Medicine for quick access at the point of
care - Point of care hand-held assistants that enable
health care providers to record, store, retrieve
and transmit the essential elements of clinical
encounters - Reference materials, diagnostic and treatment
decision aids can be included to facilitate
patient care, skill maintenance and updating
training - Electronic health records HMIS
- Clinical Services telemedicine
4How can eHealth contribute to the strengthening
of health systems? (2)
- Disease surveillance handheld computing devices
are powerful tools for data collection and for
providing rapid access to information needed to
prevent or respond to disease outbreaks - Health promotion for the general public and
specific target groups - Human resources for health
5Where are we with eHealth in sub-Saharan Africa ?
- The work of MoHs and other stakeholders already
has some eHealth components - However, generally acknowledged that eHealth is
weak - Scope and coverage rather limited
- Access to ICT limited
- Policy-makers, health practitioners and
communities often lack relevant information for
action - Lack of formal policies, norms, standards, etc
- 2005 First Survey of the Global Observatory on
eHealth - To describe and analyze eHealth profiles in
countries, regions and internationally - To identify and evaluate measures taken in key
action areas to support the development of
eHealth in countries - To establish the usefulness of WHO providing
generic eHealth tools and service for Member
States - Survey Themes
- Enabling environment
- Infrastructure
- Content
- Cultural and linguistic variety
- Capacity
- National centres for eHealth
- eHealth systems and services
6Challenges (1)- The Digital Divide
- Between countries the global digital divide
- Between groups of people within countries - the
domestic digital divide - Phones people in developed countries enjoy five
times better - access to fixed and mobile
phone services - Internet Accounts and Hosts - more Internet
accounts in London than all of Africa, One in two
Americans is online, compared with only one in
250 Africans - Bandwidth and Speed - Africa has extremely little
bandwidth - reaching
Europe and the USA - Costs - internet access costs US 1 -2 , Uganda,
over 100 (as a percentage of average monthly
income), costs of PCs beyond the reach of the
average African
7The Digital Divide PCs
- Developed states 311.2 per 1,000
- Globally 70.6 per 1,000
- South Asia 2.9 per 1,000
- Sub-Saharan Africa 0.75 per 1,000
8Challenges (2)
- Limited awareness of the potentials of eHealth
- Limited human capacity
- Funding
- Lack of legal, legislative, ethical, and
constitutional frameworks
9Opportunities
- Increasing awareness, interest and commitment by
policy-makers and professionals - Growing number of partners
- Advancing technology
10National Health IT programme of the National
Health Service, UK (1)
- The NHS Care Records Service (NHS CRS) with an
individual electronic NHS Care Record for every
patient in England, securely accessible by the
patient and those caring for them - The electronic booking service, Choose and Book -
offering patients greater choice of hospital or
clinic and more convenience in the date and time
of their appointment - Electronic Transmission of Prescriptions (ETP) -
to make prescribing and dispensing safer, easier
and more convenient for patients
11National Health IT programme of the National
Health Service, UK (2)
- Contact a central email and directory service
for the NHS, to enable staff to transfer patient
information, swiftly, securely and efficiently -
- Picture Archiving and Communications Systems
(PACS) - to capture, store, display and
distribute static and moving digital medical
images, providing clearer x-rays and scans and
faster, more accurate diagnosis -
- IT supporting GPs, including the Quality
Management and Analysis System (QMAS), support
for the Quality and Outcomes Framework and system
for GP to GP record transfer
12Whats Possible Today Wireless Hospital
Built 2002 for 60M First hospital in the United
States to store, record, and display patient data
electronically Information accessible to staff
inside or outside the hospital Driven by
Centricity Information System from GE Medical
Systems
- electronic Physician Order Entry (ePOE)
- Portable electronic prescription data entry
- Requires wireless pharmacy system data access
- Integration with pharmacy, POC, remote access to
clinical pathways lab values
- Point of Care (POC)
- Drug Delivery Management
- Care Management
13 Whats Possible Today
Remote Patient Monitoring
Allows the care provider--who might be hundreds
of miles away-- to access patient vital signs and
receive patient-initiated medical tests. The
patient or her in-home informal caregiver has
been trained to use electronic monitoring or test
equipment that sends the relevant video snapshots
or numeric data electronically to the formal
caregiver.
14What is possible Epidemic / Emergency / Disaster
Communications and Connectivity Networking
Disaster Site
Patients haveTracking/locationTriage/Medical
StatusTreatmentDisposition
Responders haveTracking/locationProvider
StatusProvider Safety
Hospital ED 1
Internet
802.11Bubble
Incident Command/Emergency Operations Center
Database
Hospital ED 2
Connectivity
Cellular 3G 802.11
LAN
LEO Satellite
Note Figure adapted from Journal of Academic
Emergency Medicine, Nov. 2004, Vol. 11, No.11, p.
1234.
15What needs to be done (1)
- Constitute National Task Force/Committee on
eHealth - Conduct National Needs Assessment for eHealth
- Develop National Policies, Standards and Norms
for eHealth - Prepare National Strategic Plan for eHealth
16What needs to be done (2)
- Build National Capacity for eHealth
- Mobilize Resources and Build Partnerships to
Support Implementation of National eHealth Plan - Implement, Monitor and Evaluate National eHealth
Plan
17Role of WHO/AFRO (1)
- Core WHO Functions
- Providing leadership on matters critical to
health and engaging in partnerships where joint
action is needed - Shaping the research agenda and stimulating the
generation, translation and dissemination of
knowledge - Setting norms and standards, and promoting and
monitoring their implementation - Articulating ethical and evidence-based policy
options - Providing technical support, catalysing change,
and building sustainable institutional capacity - Monitoring the health situation and assessing
health trends
18Role of WHO/AFRO (2)
- Advocacy
- Promote better understanding of eHealth
- Strengthen eHealth systems in countries
- Support capacity building
- Promote the use of norms, standards
- Foster public-private partnerships
19Advocacy
- WHO/AFRO Regional Committee Resolution on
Knowledge Management, Addis Ababa, Sep 2006 - Urged Member States and WHO/AFRO to plan,
implement, monitor and evaluate eHealthrelated
actions - Member States
- Prepare national strategic directions
- Establish national norms and standards
- Strengthen national capacity
- Include the health sector in national ICT
development plans - Build sustainable partnerships
20Coordinating Strategic Partnerships
- Health Information Network Access to Research
Initiative (HINARI) - AU Pan African eNetwork
- EU/WHO/AU partnership for Telemedicine
- Africa Health Infoway
21H.I.N.A.R.I.
- Collaborative effort between WHO and the private
sector to provide access to medical literature
free of charge or at a reduced rate - Over 35 publishers of medical journals have
agreed to provide access to their journals to
countries that have a GNP less than US 1000, and
to charge US 1000 per annum per institution in
countries with GNP less than US 3000 - Independent review of HINARI recently conducted
showed it is viewed as an important resource that
is making a valuable contribution to research and
teaching - Following the review, the partners agreed that
HINARI should be continued at least to meet the
time scale of the MDGs
22AU's Pan African e-Network
Tele-education - Telehealth
23EU/WHO/AU Partnership for Telemedicine
- The European Commission is interested in
supporting the application of satellite
telecommunication technology to strengthen health
systems in sub-Saharan Africa - TTF established in January 2006
- To define a roadmap for identifying a suitable
set of actions for implementing a Telemedicine
programmatic framework in the Sub-Saharan African
region - To support the definition of a technology neutral
cost-benefit study to evaluate the relevance of
a pan-African network of Telemedicine -
- The TTF comprises representatives from the AU,
the NEPAD eCommission for Africa, WHO, EC and ESA - The work of the TTF is in progress and its report
which is expected during the first quarter of
2007 will guide the preparation of the ECs
roadmap for the implementation of Telemedicine
services in the Sub-Saharan Africa
24Africa Health Infoway
- Info structure
- District health information systems
- Translating information and knowledge into policy
and action
25Provision of Technical Support to Countries
- AFRO Web-site
- CD ROM publishing and distribution
- Collaboration with eSchools project
- Electronic Health Records
- National policies, strategies, plans
26Monitoring evaluation, and international
reporting
- Participation in the activities of the Global
Observatory on eHealth (GOe) - The mission of the GOe is to improve health by
providing Member States with strategic
information and guidance on best practice,
policies and standards in eHealth - First global survey on eHealth conducted in 2005
- Will work with Ministries of Health to establish
M E systems for eHealth in Member States
27Availability Coverage (SAM)
Availability coverage shows what resources are
available in what amount for delivering an
intervention.
The Service Availability Mapping tool (SAM) is
designed to provide monitoring information on the
availability of services and resources.
http//www.who.int/healthinfo/systems/serviceavail
abilitymapping/en/
28Conclusion (1)
- eHealth is particularly relevant for developing
countries for health development as it eHealth
offers solutions for - - long-distance consultation
- emergency medical assistance administration
and logistics - supervision and quality assurance
- management of epidemics
- education and training for health care staff
29Conclusion (2)
- In operationalizing eHealth in countries in
the African Region, consideration must be given
to the 5 Cs - Context
- Content
- Connectivity
- Capacity
- Community
30Conclusion (3)
-
- Let us all work together to achieve the
conference theme of - eHealth for All
- and help address the inequalities in health care
in our world, and especially in sub-Saharan Africa