Title: RTI ppt template
1ZEPRS The Experience of the Zambian Electronic
Medical Record System 29 May 2007
RTI International is a trade name of Research
Triangle Institute
2ZEPRSThe Experience of the Zambian Electronic
Medical Record System
- Context
- Objectives
- Inputs
- Outputs
- Impact on Patient Care
- Making it Open
- Making it Scale
- Questions Comments
Chawama clinic MCH waiting room, Lusaka, Zambia
3Context
- Maternal mortality rate 940/1000
- Lifetime risk of death in pregnancy 1/25
- Disability Adjusted Life Years (DALY) at birth
30.7 - Nearly 1/3 women infected with HIV
- Virtually all modern health care for 2 million
women in Lusaka provided by 23 clinics and the
University Teaching Hospital (UTH) - 13 of 23 clinics provide antenatal care, 9 with
labor wards - 47,000 estimated total obstetric cases (2002)
Children outside Chainda Clinic, Lusaka
4Context
- All medical records on paper
- Protocol and records in reasonable order, but
significant problems in operation - Frequent failure to follow up patients diagnosed
with STDs - Failure in some cases to test for STDs
- Patients may move among clinics, but limited
sharing of patient records - No central database for monitoring patient
population or quality of care
Patient files at University Teaching Hospital,
Lusaka
5Context
- Telecommunications
- Weak landline infrastructure
- Congested 2.4GHz wireless segment
- Clinics
- Dusty, congested
- 7 of 23 clinics had telephone lines
- All clinics with VHF radio for voice
- Personnel
- No computer literacy
- Very stressed due to patient load
- High medical staff turn-over (40)
- Electrical
- Inadequate electrical systems at all points, no
backup power, No lightening protection - Poorly regulated grid (Frequent power outages)
Clinician at the door of the Prisons Kamwala
Clinic in 2002.
6Objectives
- 1. Improved health of patients
- 1.1 Improved access to patient records
- 1.2 Improved patient record quality
- 1.3 Improved patient follow-up drug adherence
- 1.4 Improved information for research and
analyzing interventions - 1.5 Useful information for Zambian health
administrators
Patient files at University Teaching Hospital,
Lusaka, 2004
7Key Requirements Assumptions
- Electronic system to replace perinatal Blue
Book - Shared, centralized database of patient records
- Wireless network connecting clinics, hospital,
administrative offices, data center - Multiple workstations in each facility
- Ability to move workstations if necessary
- Ability to print summary cards in facilities
- Ability to function through 4 hour electrical
grid failure - Operating costs paid through research grants
Pre-existing VHF radio tower at clinic.
8Inputs
- Money
- US 2.7 million (Bill Melinda Gates Foundation
through University of Alabama at Birmingham) - People
- UAB executive team
- RTI development team
- Lusaka-based technical support team
- Zambian medical advisory team
- Time
- 4 years (1 Jan 2002 30 Sep 2006)
ZEPRS and CIDRZ team at launch of electronic
referral application in Lusaka.
9Inputs Money 2.7 Million total over four years
- Subcontract costs include wireless network
equipment - ODC includes STTA travel
- Includes operating costs for the period of
performance
RTI International accounting system. All costs
include indirect costs.
10Inputs Money 1 Million in computer and
networking equipment
- 134 desktop computers, 5 laptop computers
- 29 Printers
- 130 computer carts
- Data center servers, storage, backup, UPS units,
generator - One 15m radio tower
- Wireless high speed backbone network
- Wireless base stations and subscriber units
- Wireless repeaters
- Wireless access points
- Connections to multiple buildings in clinic
compounds - UTH fiber optic and wireless network
- VoIP network equipment and handsets
- UPS battery backup units
- Lightening protection
Costs based on RTI estimates
11Inputs People
- UAB executive team (5)
- CIDRZ management and advisory team (4)
- Zambian medical advisory team (10)
- RTI development team (4)
- Consultant (1)
- Zambian technical support staff (3)
- Other Zambian testers and trainers
12Inputs Time
13Outputs
- Wireless network
- Patient referral system
- Perinatal patient record system
- Clinicians trained
- Clinicians using system
Cellular telephone tower with ZEPRS co-located
equipment
14Outputs Wireless Network
- Line of sight
- Hub and spoke
- 45Mbps backbone
- 20Mbps subscriber links
- 10Mbps within buildings
- Connects 24 clinics, 1 hospital, 2 administrative
offices, 1 data center - Internet access for all facilities
- Voice communication (VoIP) for all facilities
- Data center maintained by NGO with research
funding - Availability at 88.3 (26 Nov 2 Dec 2006)
27km diameter hub and spoke line of sight network
Map of Lusaka showing wireless links
ZEPRS - Zambia Electronic Perinatal Record
System.kmz
15Outputs Wireless Network
- Co-location on cell telephone towers, commercial
building, ZNBC tower - Repeaters used to reach some sights
- No redundant links
- LEAP, RADIUS, encryption for security
Map showing wireless links from TELECEL 1 hub
ZEPRS - Zambia Electronic Perinatal Record
System.kmz
16Outputs Wireless Network
- Existing VHF radio towers at most clinics used to
mount wireless network equipment. - Multiple buildings in many clinic compounds
connected using wireless and wired links.
Satellite photo indicating wireless link to
existing Matero Main clinic VHF radio tower.
17Outputs Wireless NetworkConnecting multiple
buildings at clinics
- Wired and wireless connections used to extend
network to multiple buildings.
18Outputs Wireless NetworkNetworking wards at UTH
- Fiber optic cable, copper cable, and wireless
equipment connects wards at UTH
19Outputs Patient Referral System
- Notifies referral clinic or hospital of incoming
patients - Provides critical information to prepare for
patients - Updates referring clinic on patient status
- Maintains records of all referrals
- Used by 24 clinics and hospital successfully for
2 years - Replaced by ZEPRS patient record system in
February 2006
Clinicians launch referral system in July, 2004
20Outputs Patient Referral SystemNumber of
Referrals by Week
21Outputs Patient Record System
- Provides clinicians access to patient records 24
hours a day, seven days a week - Alerts clinicians automatically to complete
procedures, improve follow-up, and make sure
critical-care issues are addressed - Data used to coach medical teams
- Longitudinal data used to prioritize, design,
monitor, and evaluate interventions
22Outputs Patient Record SystemPerinatal, VCT,
PMTCT, Delivery
- Pregnancy Dating - captured at first visit and
automatically updated during pregnancy with
EGA/EDD - Pregnancies linked, with critical problems from
one pregnancy pre-populating for the next
pregnancy - Safe Motherhood - request labs (CD4, RPR, HB) and
view lab results, ARV counseling visits - Ability to add problems, populate automated
system problems, link problems from mother to
child and vice versa - Convert visits can be flagged as problem visits
- Role based access control - clerks have no access
to medical data, only demographics - Graphical partograph matches WHO partograph
- Infants linked for each pregnancy to mother
- Patient Referral system for easy tracking
- Data warehouse and XML data export facilitate
reporting in SAS, SPSS, etc. - Standalone mode for remote clinics with
occasional connectivity - can sync records
automatically with the main system.
ZEPRS helps remind and coach clinicians through
an extensible rules system.
23Outputs Clinicians Trained
- All training conducted by Zambians
- Basic computer skills training conducted by IT
specialists - Referral and patient records training conducted
by senior clinicians - 800 nurses, midwives and other health workers
trained - Basics skills (Windows, Word)
- ZEPRS mail system
- Referral system
- Patient record system
Initial training for referral application.
24Outputs Clinicians Using System Average 584 new
patients each week
5 Feb 2006 16 May 2007. Weeks include one-day
weeks at beginning and end of year, resulting in
54 weeks for 2006.
25Outputs Clinicians Using System More than
39,000 patients
5 Feb 2006 16 May 2007. Weeks include one-day
weeks at beginning and end of year, resulting in
54 weeks for 2006.
26Outputs Clinicians Using System19 Clinics
actively using system
Feb 2006 16 May 2007. Kanyama and State
Lodge with only a few patients to date.
27Outputs Clinicians Using System7,657 babies
delivered
Feb 2006 16 May 2007.
28Major Correction Points 1
29Major Correction Points 2
30Major Correction Points 3
31Major Correction PointsPrototype custom 585
rugged mobile enclosed carts
- Advantages
- Some protection against dust
- Good protection against theft
- Disadvantages
- Expensive
- Requires antenna extension
- Hiding place for rodents
Custom enclosed cart prototype, made in South
Africa.
Prototype cart being used for launch of referral
System.
32Major Correction PointsCommercial mobile wire carts
- Advantages
- Inexpensive
- Readily available
- No hiding places for rodents
- No antenna extension required
- Disadvantages
- No protection against dust
- Weaker protection against theft
In examination room.
Being used by clinicians.
33Sustaining ItNetwork availability
Availability October 1, 2005 - April 30, 2006
(16 months) Availability can be higher than 90
on an extended basis...
Availability October 1, 2005 - April 30, 2006 (7
months) Availability suffers due to management
inattention and contention for resources.
34Sustaining ItNetwork availability
- Causes
- Lightening
- Extended power failures at some clinics
- Equipment failure
- Other Factors
- Management of support staff
- Inadequate on-site spares
- Aging equipment
35Making it Open
- Software developed using open source tools and
best-of-breed web architecture - Software adapted easily to other contexts and
applications - ZEPRS software released under ASL2 open source
license - ZEPRS documentation published under a Creative
Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5
license - ZEPRS demonstration and development websites open
to all - www.idg-rti.org
36Collaborating and Combining Open Source Efforts
- ZEPRS
- Problem-based care
- Electronic referrals
- Web-based forms
- Developed documentation
- Experience in large scale deployment
- Years of experience in operation
- Off-line mode
- Stand-alone version (Eclipse RCP)
- OpenMRS
- Regenstrief data model and concept dictionary
- Broader development and support community
General records at Kalingalinga Clinic prior to
ZEPRS.
37Making it ScaleExpanding beyond a metropolitan
area
- Tested
- Offline version for clinics with multiple PCs
- Automated record synchronization with centralized
database - Proof-of-concept
- Stand-alone packaged version (Zephyr)
- Concept
- Organic scaling
- Aggregate data reporting via mobile phone network
- Automatic SMS reminders and notifications to
patients
Safe Motherhood form from Zephyr stand-alone
version of ZEPRS.
38Making it Scale
We are balancing local resources and remote
resources to provide a perception of continuous
connection to a central data source. When we
experienced some problems with ZEPRS network
availability, we attempted to bring server
resources closer to the clinics by building a
more distributed model placing mini-servers in
each clinic. Then we implemented a system to
enable these remote servers to phone home when
the network links were back up to fetch updated
records and synchronize with the master server.
- Chris E. Kelley, RTI Senior Software
Developer
39Making it Scale
ZEPRS can operate as an easy-to-install
stand-alone application on a single PC.
40Making it Scale
Technologies such as Zeroconf can enable users
with minimal technical support to create a
shared, networked database within a facility.
41Making it Scale
Operating in off-line mode, installations of
ZEPRS can report aggregate data and synchronize
patient records with centralized databases when
telecommunication links are available.
42Questions Comments
RTI Development Team Eileen Reynolds, Project
Manager Chris E. Kelley, Senior Software
Developer Niamh Darcy, Senior Technical
Advisor Pablo Destefanis, Senior Networking and
Telecommunications Specialist Gordon M. Cressman,
Senior Project Advisor Lusaka Technical Support
Staff Dennis Nkula, Zambia Project
Coordinator Francis Banda, Technical Support
Specialist Jamie Mwanza, Technical Support
Specialist Center for Infectious Disease
Research in Zambia Dr. Jeffrey Stringer, MD,
Director, Co-Investigator Dr. Perry Killam, MD,
Project Advisor Harmony Fusco, Project
Manager Chafye Siulata, Project Assistant
UAB Team Dr. Robert L. Goldenberg, MD, Principal
Investigator Dr. Dwight Rouse, MD,
Co-Investigator Dr. Sten Vermund, MD,
Co-Invesigator Dr. Francis Nuthalpathy, Health
Informatics Advisor Dr. Alan Tita, Health
Informatics Advisor Zambian Medical Advisors Dr.
Moses Sinkala, MD Dr. Elwyn Chomba, MD Dr. Ben
Chirwa, MD Dr. Henri Phiri, MD Dr. Christopher
Ngandwe, MD Dr. Chipepo Kankasa, MD Dr. Macha,
MD Dr. Mpundu Makasa, MD
43Making it OpenZEPRS Open Source technologies and
components
44Inputs People
45Inputs People
46Inputs People
47Inputs People
48Inputs People