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1.
J Am Med Inform Assoc ; 18(2): 150-5, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21252053

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Little evidence exists on effective interventions to integrate HIV-care guidelines into practices within developing countries. This study tested the hypothesis that clinical summaries with computer-generated reminders could improve clinicians' compliance with CD4 testing guidelines in the resource-limited setting of sub-Saharan Africa. DESIGN: A prospective comparative study of two randomly selected outpatient adult HIV clinics in western Kenya. Printed summaries with reminders for overdue CD4 tests were made available to clinicians in the intervention clinic but not in the control clinic. MEASUREMENTS: Changes in order rates for overdue CD4 tests were compared between and within the two clinics. RESULTS: The computerized reminder system identified 717 encounters (21%) with overdue CD4 tests. Analysis by study assignment (regardless of summaries being printed or not) revealed that with computer-generated reminders, CD4 order rates were significantly higher in the intervention clinic compared to the control clinic (53% vs 38%, OR = 1.80, CI 1.34 to 2.42, p < 0.0001). When comparison was restricted to encounters where summaries with reminders were printed, order rates in intervention clinic were even higher (63%). The intervention clinic increased CD4 ordering from 42% before reminders to 63% with reminders (50% increase, OR = 2.32, CI 1.67 to 3.22, p < 0.0001), compared to control clinic with only 8% increase from prestudy baseline (CI 0.83 to 1.46, p = 0.51). Limitations Evaluation was conducted at two clinics in a single institution. CONCLUSIONS: Clinical summaries with computer-generated reminders significantly improved clinician compliance with CD4 testing guidelines in the resource-limited setting of sub-Saharan Africa. This technology can have broad applicability to improve quality of HIV care in these settings.


Subject(s)
CD4 Lymphocyte Count , Decision Support Systems, Clinical , Guideline Adherence , HIV Infections/therapy , Reminder Systems , Adult , Electronic Health Records , Female , HIV Infections/immunology , Humans , Kenya , Linear Models , Male , Prospective Studies
2.
J Am Med Inform Assoc ; 16(6): 882-8, 2009.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19717795

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: The AMPATH program is a leading initiative in rural Kenya providing healthcare services to combat HIV. Malnutrition and food insecurity are common among AMPATH patients and the Nutritional Information System (NIS) was designed, with cross-functional collaboration between engineering and medical communities, as a comprehensive electronic system to record and assist in effective food distribution in a region with poor infrastructure. DESIGN: The NIS was designed modularly to support the urgent need of a system for the growing food distribution program. The system manages the ordering, storage, packing, shipping, and distribution of fresh produce from AMPATH farms and dry food supplements from the World Food Programme (WFP) and U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) based on nutritionists' prescriptions for food supplements. Additionally, the system also records details of food distributed to support future studies. MEASUREMENTS: Patients fed weekly, patient visits per month. RESULTS: With inception of the NIS, the AMPATH food distribution program was able to support 30,000 persons fed weekly, up from 2,000 persons. Patient visits per month also saw a marked increase. CONCLUSION: The NIS' modular design and frequent, effective interactions between developers and users has positively affected the design, implementation, support, and modifications of the NIS. It demonstrates the success of collaboration between engineering and medical communities, and more importantly the feasibility for technology readily available in a modern country to contribute to healthcare delivery in developing countries like Kenya and other parts of sub-Saharan Africa.


Subject(s)
Food Services/organization & administration , Information Systems , Malnutrition/diet therapy , Resource Allocation/organization & administration , Therapy, Computer-Assisted , Dietary Supplements , HIV Infections/prevention & control , Humans , Kenya , Malnutrition/prevention & control , Rural Health Services , Software Design , Systems Integration , User-Computer Interface
3.
Medscape J Med ; 10(1): 22, 2008 Jan 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18324332

ABSTRACT

We present the case of a 67-year-old woman with chronic cor pulmonale. She never smoked tobacco and had no other risk factors for pulmonary disease. In developed nations, chronic obstructive lung disease and cor pulmonale are overwhelmingly associated with tobacco use. However, indoor air pollution, most commonly due to burning of solid biomass fuel such as wood, can cause similar clinical syndromes. At our teaching hospital, there is an epidemic of chronic cor pulmonale among nonsmoking women. We attribute this sex predilection to women's greater exposure to wood smoke. Physicians must be cognizant of its risks and counsel patients on prevention strategies such as improved ventilation.


Subject(s)
Air Pollution, Indoor , Pulmonary Heart Disease/diagnosis , Pulmonary Heart Disease/etiology , Risk Assessment , Tobacco Smoke Pollution , Aged , Female , Heating , Humans , Risk Factors , Smoke , Wood
4.
J Gen Intern Med ; 22(12): 1745-50, 2007 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17972138

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: The HIV/AIDS epidemic in sub-Saharan Africa is decimating populations, deteriorating economies, deepening poverty, and destabilizing traditional social orders. The advent of the U.S. President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) made significant supplemental resources available to sub-Saharan national programs for the prevention and treatment of HIV/AIDS, but few programs have demonstrated the capacity to use these resources to increase rapidly in size. In this context, AMPATH, a collaboration of Indiana University School of Medicine, the Moi University School of Medicine, and the Moi Teaching and Referral Hospital in Eldoret, Kenya, is a stunning exception. This report summarizes findings from an assessment of AMPATH staff perceptions of how and why this has happened. PARTICIPANTS AND APPROACH: Semistructured, in-depth, individual interviews of 26 AMPATH workers were conducted and recorded. Field notes from these interviews were generated by independent reviewers and subjected to close-reading qualitative analysis for themes. RESULTS: The themes identified were as follows: creating effectively, connecting with others, making a difference, serving those in great need, providing comprehensive care to restore healthy lives, and growing as a person and a professional. CONCLUSION: Inspired personnel are among the critical assets of an effective program. Among the reasons for success of this HIV/AIDS program are a set of work values and motivations that would be helpful in any setting, but perhaps nowhere more critical than in the grueling work of making a complex program work spectacularly well in the challenging setting of a resource-poor country. Sometimes, even in the face of long odds, the human spirit prevails.


Subject(s)
Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome/therapy , Attitude of Health Personnel , HIV Infections/therapy , Program Evaluation , Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome/epidemiology , Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome/prevention & control , HIV Infections/epidemiology , HIV Infections/prevention & control , Health Services Needs and Demand , Hospitals, Teaching , Humans , Indiana , International Cooperation , Interprofessional Relations , Kenya/epidemiology , National Health Programs , Patient Care Team , Patient-Centered Care , Professional-Patient Relations , Schools, Medical
5.
Stud Health Technol Inform ; 129(Pt 1): 372-6, 2007.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17911742

ABSTRACT

Providing high-quality HIV/AIDS care requires high-quality, accessible data on individual patients and visits. These data can also drive strategic decision-making by health systems, national programs, and funding agencies. One major obstacle to HIV/AIDS care in developing countries is lack of electronic medical record systems (EMRs) to collect, manage, and report clinical data. In 2001, we implemented a simple primary care EMR at a rural health centre in western Kenya. This EMR evolved into a comprehensive, scalable system serving 19 urban and rural health centres. To date, the AMPATH Medical Record System contains 10 million observations from 400,000 visit records on 45,000 patients. Critical components include paper encounter forms for adults and children, technicians entering/managing data, and modules for patient registration, scheduling, encounters, clinical observations, setting user privileges, and a concept dictionary. Key outputs include patient summaries, care reminders, and reports for program management, operating ancillary services (e.g., tracing patients who fail to return for appointments), strategic planning (e.g., hiring health care providers and staff), reports to national AIDS programs and funding agencies, and research.


Subject(s)
HIV Infections/therapy , Medical Records Systems, Computerized , Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome/therapy , Costs and Cost Analysis , Developing Countries , Humans , Kenya , Medical Records Systems, Computerized/economics , Medical Records Systems, Computerized/statistics & numerical data , Rural Health Services/organization & administration
6.
Acad Med ; 82(8): 812-8, 2007 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17762264

ABSTRACT

Partnerships between academic medical center (AMCs) in North America and the developing world are uniquely capable of fulfilling the tripartite needs of care, training, and research required to address health care crises in the developing world. Moreover, the institutional resources and credibility of AMCs can provide the foundation to build systems of care with long-term sustainability, even in resource-poor settings. The authors describe a partnership between Indiana University School of Medicine and Moi University and Moi Teaching and Referral Hospital in Kenya that demonstrates the power of an academic medical partnership in its response to the HIV/AIDS pandemic in sub-Saharan Africa. Through the Academic Model for the Prevention and Treatment of HIV/AIDS, the partnership currently treats over 40,000 HIV-positive patients at 19 urban and rural sites in western Kenya, now enrolls nearly 2,000 new HIV positive patients every month, feeds up to 30,000 people weekly, enables economic security, fosters HIV prevention, tests more than 25,000 pregnant women annually for HIV, engages communities, and is developing a robust electronic information system. The partnership evolved from a program of limited size and a focus on general internal medicine into one of the largest and most comprehensive HIV/AIDS-control systems in sub-Saharan Africa. The partnership's rapid increase in scale, combined with the comprehensive and long-term approach to the region's health care needs, provides a twinning model that can and should be replicated to address the shameful fact that millions are dying of preventable and treatable diseases in the developing world.


Subject(s)
Academic Medical Centers/organization & administration , Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome/drug therapy , International Cooperation , Rural Health Services/organization & administration , Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome/epidemiology , Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome/prevention & control , Africa South of the Sahara/epidemiology , Health Services Needs and Demand , Humans , Indiana , Kenya , Rural Health Services/statistics & numerical data
7.
J Am Med Inform Assoc ; 10(4): 295-303, 2003.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12668697

ABSTRACT

The authors implemented an electronic medical record system in a rural Kenyan health center. Visit data are recorded on a paper encounter form, eliminating duplicate documentation in multiple clinic logbooks. Data are entered into an MS-Access database supported by redundant power systems. The system was initiated in February 2001, and 10,000 visit records were entered for 6,190 patients in six months. The authors present a summary of the clinics visited, diagnoses made, drugs prescribed, and tests performed. After system implementation, patient visits were 22% shorter. They spent 58% less time with providers (p < 0.001) and 38% less time waiting (p = 0.06). Clinic personnel spent 50% less time interacting with patients, two thirds less time interacting with each other, and more time in personal activities. This simple electronic medical record system has bridged the "digital divide." Financial and technical sustainability by Kenyans will be key to its future use and development.


Subject(s)
Medical Records Systems, Computerized/organization & administration , Primary Health Care/organization & administration , Delivery of Health Care/organization & administration , Humans , Kenya , Medical Records Systems, Computerized/instrumentation , Office Visits , Rural Health Services/organization & administration , Time and Motion Studies , User-Computer Interface
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