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Assessment of readiness for a community-based teleaudiology program of selected primary care health facilities in the Philippines
Acta Medica Philippina ; : 85-94, 2023.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-988876
ABSTRACT
Introduction@#Access to appropriate and timely care underpins the Republic Act 9707 or the Universal Newborn Hearing Screening and Intervention Act of 2009. However, less than 10% of babies born every year have been screened for hearing loss. The Hearing for Life (HeLe) research program aims to increase the rate of newborn hearing screening (NHS) nationwide through the development and deployment of novel digital health or eHealth technologies in government rural primary care health centers (PCHC). The HeLe is also built on the global call for increased and systematic use of eHealth to strengthen health systems. Effectiveness of eHealth innovations requires acknowledgment of the product’s life cycle; one consideration is organizational readiness at this development stage of the HeLe. @*Objective@#This study assessed readiness of the eight PCHC selected to use the HeLe technologies. @*Methods@#This research utilized the Khoja-Durrani-Scott (KDS) eHealth evaluation tool to assess the PCHC’s readiness level prior to the implementation of HeLe. The KDS tool was distributed through a self-administered survey; data was analyzed using descriptive statistics. Readiness is measured in terms of seven dimensions or outcomes resulting from the use of the HeLe technologies. @*Results@#The study revealed that the eight PCHC were most to least ready, in decreasing order, in the following areas Ethical, Health, Technology, Social & Cultural, Readiness & Change Management, as well as Economic, and Policy outcomes. The study affirms the PCHCs’ value for equity in health care, i.e., providing accessible NHS services in the community setting closest to where the families and their newborns are. Likewise, results confirm the PCHC staff’s preparedness for another set of innovations, through agreement with statements on Technology, Social & Cultural as well as Readiness & Change Management parameters. @*Conclusions@#The results informed the training and technical support strategies to be implemented by the HeLe program proponents. However, even in this early development phase of the HeLe technologies, the PCHC are already concerned with how to sustain NHS services after the research. Fully aware that the HeLe ICT tools need to be maintained and upgraded, the PCHC views that economic and policy support should also be in place to ensure continuous delivery of the ICT-enabled NHS services. While results are illustrative, usefulness is limited by the small sample size and character of the study sites. Nevertheless, social dimensions still have to be carefully considered as innovative NHS tools are introduced to primary care health workers nationwide. Researchers have to be deliberate in working with broader health systems and policy advocacy efforts to allow novel NHS technologies to be smoothly introduced at the community level and frontlines of care.
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Index: WPRIM (Western Pacific) Main subject: Primary Health Care / Technology / Health / Telemedicine / Ethics / Policy / Change Management Language: English Journal: Acta Medica Philippina Year: 2023 Type: Article

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Index: WPRIM (Western Pacific) Main subject: Primary Health Care / Technology / Health / Telemedicine / Ethics / Policy / Change Management Language: English Journal: Acta Medica Philippina Year: 2023 Type: Article