Phiona Vumbugwa, Nancy Puttkammer, Moira Majaha, Andrew Likaka, Sonora Stampfly, Paul Biondich, Jennifer E Shivers, Kendi Mburu, Olusegun O Soge, Chris Longenecker, Jan Flowers, Caryl Feldacker
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Many low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) face the daunting task of digitising, maturing and deciding where to invest in digital health systems.
Aim: Describing the facilitators and barriers to conducting digital health maturity assessments and how health leaders can prioritise the assessments.
Setting: eHealth leaders from 10 African countries, working or supporting Ministries of Health's digital health and participating in the eHealth Leaders' Forum from July 2023 to September 2023.
Methods: This qualitative, descriptive study utilised key informant interviews conducted via Zoom with 14 conveniently selected leaders. We used Dedoose Version 9.0 to develop themes based on the health system's building blocks.
Results: Participants identified maturity assessments as a critical first step to digital health strengthening, showing the system's performance and building a baseline response to systematic data quality challenges. Barriers to conducting digital health maturity assessment include lacking collaborators' buy-in, fragmented vision, overdependence on donor priorities, non-supportive policies and an inadequately skilled workforce. Facilitators include multi-stakeholder engagement, understanding the country's digital health ecosystem and appropriately integrating maturity assessment objectives. Recommendations include capacity building in data use and conducting maturity assessments at all health system levels to grow the demand and value of digital health strengthening.
Conclusion: Promoting digital health maturity assessments can help leaders to make appropriate decisions to prioritise areas of improvement and steward maturity advancement as a pathway to strengthening the health system.
Contribution: We spotlight the perspectives of African eHealth leaders, centering voices on the barriers, facilitators to planning and recommendations for implementing digital health systems maturity assessments.
背景:许多低收入和中等收入国家面临着数字化、成熟和决定在何处投资数字卫生系统的艰巨任务。目的:描述开展数字健康成熟度评估的促进因素和障碍,以及卫生领导者如何确定评估的优先顺序。背景:来自10个非洲国家的电子卫生领导人,从事或支持卫生部的数字卫生工作,并于2023年7月至2023年9月参加电子卫生领导人论坛。方法:本定性、描述性研究利用Zoom对14位方便选择的领导人进行的关键线人访谈。我们使用Dedoose Version 9.0根据卫生系统的构建块开发主题。结果:参与者将成熟度评估确定为加强数字卫生的关键第一步,显示系统的性能并建立对系统数据质量挑战的基线响应。开展数字卫生成熟度评估的障碍包括缺乏合作者的支持、愿景分散、过度依赖捐助者的优先事项、缺乏支持性政策和技能不足的劳动力。促进因素包括多方利益相关者参与、了解该国的数字卫生生态系统以及适当整合成熟度评估目标。建议包括在数据使用方面进行能力建设,并在卫生系统各级开展成熟度评估,以增加数字卫生加强的需求和价值。结论:促进数字化健康成熟度评估可以帮助领导者做出适当的决策,优先考虑改进领域,并管理成熟度提升,作为加强卫生系统的途径。贡献:我们聚焦非洲电子卫生领导人的观点,集中讨论实施数字卫生系统成熟度评估的障碍、促进因素和建议。
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Public Health in Africa (JPHiA) is a peer-reviewed, academic journal that focuses on health issues in the African continent. The journal editors seek high quality original articles on public health related issues, reviews, comments and more. The aim of the journal is to move public health discourse from the background to the forefront. The success of Africa’s struggle against disease depends on public health approaches.