Title: Tele-health and Rural Empowerment
1Tele-health and Rural Empowerment
Prof. CM Pandey Sub Dean and Head Department of
Biostatistics and Health Informatics Sanjay
Gandhi Postgraduate Institute of Medical
Sciences Lucknow-226014, India Email
cmpandey_at_sgpgi.ac.in
2Presentation Outline
- Health Situation in Amethi and around
- Role IT in Rural Health Care
- Hospital Information Systems and EMR
3Part 1 Local Health Situation
4District Sultanpur
5Sample summary
Reference Period 2004-5
Clusters covered 30
Total households 1216
Total population 9440
Eligible women participated 1150
Pregnancy history 3808
Recently delivered mothers 252
Children 0-35 months 759
6Village profile
7Access to health facility
Facilities within 1 km from the village
8Medical practitioners in village
System of medicine Percent villages having practitioners Percent villages having practitioners Percent villages having practitioners Percent villages having practitioners
System of medicine 1-4 5-8 gt8 None
Allopathic 26.7 3.3 3.3 66.7
Ayurvadic 03.3 0.0 0.0 96.7
Unani 03.3 0.0 0.0 96.7
Homeopathic 20.0 3.3 0.0 76.7
Bone setters 43.3 0.0 0.0 56.7
Others 33.3 16.7 10.0 40.0
9Housing condition
10Household facilities
Main source of light Electricity Kerosene or gas Others 64.31 28.20 07.07
Sanitation facility Own flush toilet Own pit toilet Shared toilet (any type) Public toilet (any type) No toilet facility 6.99 0.82 9.21 0.00 82.98
Main cooking fuel LPG/electricity Kerosene Other 12.83 1.81 85.36
Use of iodized salt SC/ST OBC Other 78.31 40.28 83.97
11Household size and EW
Characteristics Percent Households
Total number of Household 1216
Eligible Women per Household None One Two Three 7.07 57.98 20.48 14.47
Mean eligible women per Household 1.55
Mean size of Household 7.75
12Age and sex distribution of household population
Female
Male
13 Age at consummation of marriage (Female)
14Pregnancy outcome
15Pregnancy outcome by Age
Mothers Age (yrs) Outcome of pregnancy Outcome of pregnancy Outcome of pregnancy Outcome of pregnancy Number of pregnancies
Mothers Age (yrs) Live birth Still birth Spontaneous abortion Induced abortion Number of pregnancies
15-19 20-24 25-29 30-34 35-39 40-44 87.0 89.6 92.0 90.7 93.7 93.3 4.3 2.7 3.0 4.0 2.3 2.5 8.7 7.1 4.6 4.1 3.7 4.0 0.0 0.6 0.4 1.3 0.3 0.2 46 521 962 959 875 445
16Children born and surviving
Mothers Age group (yrs) Mean children ever born Mean children ever born Mean children ever born Mean children surviving Mean children surviving Mean children surviving No. of women
Mothers Age group (yrs) Male Female Total Male Female Total No. of women
15-19 20-24 25-29 30-34 35-39 40-44 0.28 0.87 1.44 2.20 2.44 2.54 0.28 0.72 1.43 1.89 2.36 2.69 0.57 1.59 2.87 4.08 4.80 5.23 0.27 0.84 1.38 2.06 2.26 2.30 0.27 0.68 1.37 1.76 2.20 2.44 0.54 1.52 2.75 3.82 4.46 4.74 74 293 311 219 172 81
17Place of delivery
18Treatment of neonatal morbidity
Percent Neonates
19Part 2 ICT USE
20ICT Applications in Rural India
21e-Chaupal
Source Word Bank
22Success Stories
23Digital Health
Some of the known forms of digital health are
- Tele-health Systems
- Therapeutic Diagnostic Devices
- Medication Monitoring Equipment
- Remote Monitoring Devices
- Mobile Health Applications
- Electronic Health Records
- Medical Robotics
- ePrescriptions
24nLogue -Telemedicine
25SGPGI Hospital Information System
26Part 3 HIS
27Patient Care Process
ILL PATIENTS
Cured
Improved
Unchanged
Accommodation Communication Investigation Treatmen
t Social needs Sanitation Nutrition
Absconded
Expired
TREATED PATIENTS
Medical
Surgical
Others
28What is HIS ?
- A hospital information system (HIS), also called
clinical information system (CIS) is a
comprehensive, integrated information system
usually designed to manage the administrative,
financial and clinical aspects of a hospital.
This encompasses paper-based information
processing as well as data processing machines
29Data Source and Linkages
Central Registration Admission
Wards
OPD
Discharge Billing
Hospital Information System
Public Relation Enquiry
Operation Theater
Labs Radiology
Patients Records
- BACK OFFICE
- Stores, Purchase
- Establishment
- Finance
- Planning
- Security
30Scope of HIS
- As an area of medical informatics the aim of any
HIS is to achieve the best possible support for
patient care and administration by electronic
data processing. - It can be composed of variety of sub-systems in
medical specialties (e.g. Laboratory Information
System, Radiology Information System). - CISs are sometimes separated from HISs and
former concentrate on patient- and clinical
state- related data (electronic patient record)
whereas the latter focuses on management issues
of the hospital.
31HIS Modules
- Registration
- Enquiry
- Appointments
- Out-Patient Mgt
- Investigations
- Billing-Accounts
- Operation Theatre
- Blood Bank
- In-Patient Mgt
- CSSD Mgt
- Diet Kitchen
- Bio-Medical Eng
- Central Stores
- Pharmacy Mgt
- Medical Records
- Master Mgt
32HIS New features
- Web based system
- Online Registration
- Online appointment
- Online Reports
- e Banking
- Integration with PACS
- Smart card
- Biometrics
33HIS Design Issues
- Centralized or distributed database
- Data Security and confidentiality
- Data capturing technology
- Data exchange standards
- Local vs Global access
34Centralized Database
Computer Based Patient Record (CPR)
USERS
35Distributed Database
Pharmacy System
Patient Pharmacy Data
LAB System
Patient Lab Data
NETWORK SERVER
Other Departmental Systems
Intradepartmental (e.g. Lab Users)
Patient Financial Data
Computer based Patient Record (CPR)
Billing System
USERS
36Data Security and Confidentiality
37Type of data in patient care
- Alpha Numeric
- Static Image
- Dynamic Image
- Voice
38Data Capturing Technologies
- Key Board Entry
- Mouse and GUI
- OCR and ICR
- Light Pen and touch screens
- Voice Recognition System
- Equipment Interface
39Data Exchange Standards
Data Exchange Vocabulary Standards Communication
Network Protocols
- ICD 10 Disease and Condition
- International Statistical Classification of
Diseases and Injuries by WHO - HIPAA Procedures and Insurance
- HIPAA stands for Health Insurance Portability
and Accountability Act which was framed by the
Dept of Health and Human Services USA and was
passed by US Federal Congress in 1996. The
guidelines were implemented in April, 2003
40Data Exchange Standards
- HL7 Equipment interface
- HL7 or "Health Level Seven" is the standard
language for the electronic interchange of
clinical, financial, and administrative
information between health care oriented computer
systems. In other words, HL7 acts as the standard
for interoperability of health information
technology - DICOM Image compatibility
- DICOM stands for "Digital Imaging and
Communication in Medicine" is a document that
defines a method of communication for the various
equipment of digital medical imaging
devices/software (modalities). This standard is
now in use by the majority of medical imaging
hardware manufacturers.
41Thank You