Title: Introducing the Commonwealth PowerPoint Presentation
1The Commonwealth 53 nations one community
2ECOSOC Africa Regional Ministerial meeting on
e-health use of information and communication
technology for health10-11 June 2009Accra, Ghana
- A presentation by the Commonwealth Secretariat
- Addressing e-health policies and strategies in
the Commonwealth - by
- Dr Joseph Amuzu
- Adviser, Health Section
- Commonwealth Secretariat
3Where are we?
- The May 2008 Commonwealth Health Ministers
Meeting (CHMM) focused on e-health. - An e-health survey results from the Commonwealth
was presented at the meeting.
4Challenges identified in the survey
- E-health initiatives varied widely
- Isolated e-health
- Change management
- The scale and time of implementation
- Financing e-health
- Technological challenges
- Ethical Challenges
5Varied e-health initiatives
- Multiple examples of e-health in health manpower
training, development of HIS - Fewer examples for procurement/logistics,
leadership training, clinical service delivery - Initiatives not linked to coherent strategy,
uncoordinated, donor supported, mainly with NGOs
6- Change management
- E-health is additional work without
remuneration - We need to perceive technology as an additional
tool to facilitate improved efficiency in the
delivery of health care and not as a monster
waiting to expose us - The need for training for Ministry staff and
service providers in computer literacy the
design of new clinical and working practices
user support and project management. -
- A lot of technophobia among staff and senior
officers.
7Financing e-health
- Commonwealth countries report that the main
financial challenges relate to equipment and
telecommunications infrastructure - Projects were financed by a mixture of public and
donor funds. - The benefits of e-health for developing countries
are well known but the financial costs are not. - Few case studies on the financial costs of
e-health in developing countries.
8 Legal and ethical issues
-
- Predominant issue identified in survey was
patient privacy and confidentiality of medical
records - There may be a trade off between improved quality
and access versus the risk of reduced security
and confidentiality - Intellectual property rights between public and
private sectors must be clarified
9 Lessons Learned
- E-health requires long term planning between
Health, Finance and Technology Ministries/sectors - Simpler technology often produces better results
- Financial sustainability can be a challenge for
e-health - ICT that reaches rural areas may contribute more
to MDGs than urban interventions
10The CHMM 2008 mandated the Commonwealth
Secretariat to work in e-health.
- The specific mandates were
- Convene high-level consultations involving
Ministers of Health and Ministers with
responsibility for ICTs - Promote the exchange of e-health expertise
between Commonwealth countries - Seek funding to support interventions.
111. Ministerial Dialogues
- One Dialogue held for Ministers of Health
Ministers responsible for ICT from the East,
Central and Southern Africa (ECSA) region. - The aim was to
- Enable ministries for health and technology to
share information and collaborate effectively - Support health ministries in developing
realistic, affordable e-health strategies and
investment plans - Expand e-health capacity and capabilities.
12Outcomes of the Dialogue
- Ministers identified some issues of concern
- ICT and health policies and strategies
- e-legislation in the ECSA region
- e-health standards
- e-health infrastructure
- Capacity and the need for capacity-building in
ICTs - They requested reviews of these challenges
- They identified priority areas for action and
- Set up a technical working group on e-health
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13The priority actions
- Ministers requested the Commonwealth Secretariat
and its partners to help - countries develop their policies and strategies
- countries develop guidelines on equipment
procurement and ICT sourcing strategy - in designing tools for auditing existing health
informatics and telemedicine training - establish health sector-wide training programmes
including leadership training on e-health and ICT
14 2. The technical working group
- The TWG included representatives from Uganda,
Kenya, Mozambique, WHO/AFRO, AU and was supported
by an expert from South Africa. - The TWG was tasked to
- review the main approaches to e-health policies
and strategies and - to draft a framework for an assessment of the
status of e-health in the region.
15Results
- A methodology and templates for e-health policies
and strategies developed - A questionnaire for the assessment of the status
of e-health developed - It is a tool for auditing existing e-health
infrastructure and capacity based on WHO and
Bellagio frameworks.
16- The methodology
- The methodology involves bringing together all
stakeholders Ministries of Health, ICT and
Finance, civil society, the private sector mainly
telecom companies, doctors and nurses
associations and development partners. - The information from the templates proves to be
useful in developing the policy and strategy. - The Templates
- Is based on e-health Strategy Loop
17 18Leadership Who are the leaders? Who should
they lead? What skills and knowledge do they
need?
19- Change management
- Identify stakeholders needs
- Continuous stakeholder engagement
- Explain the changes, the new ways of working
new competences - use of technology
- changes in procurement models
- increase need for programme and project
management - more training
- It is a whole organisational culture change
20 21(No Transcript)
223. Collaboration with Kenya
- The methodology and templates for e-health
policies and strategies were pretested by the
Kenyan Ministry of Medical Services. - A strategic planning workshop was held in Kenya,
taking forward two key issues that arose from the
Ministerial Dialogue. - How to frame and develop an e-health policy and
strategy for Kenya - Scoping and delivering an e-health readiness
review in Kenya.
23Collaboration with ICT suppliers
- Cisco Systems is supporting the Commonwealth
Secretariat with the Ministerial High-Level
Dialogues. - Â The Health Section is also in discussion with
Microsoft to identify collaborative work and
funding support for the Secretariat eHealth
programme.
24The next steps
- Strengthen partnerships, working together with
Ministries of Health ICT, International
Organisations, AU, Regional Health Organisations,
private sector and civil society. - Initiate the cycle of work taking place in the
ECSA region in West African and other regions of
the Commonwealth - Ministerial High Level Dialogues
- Support continental, regional and country
e-health policy and strategy development
processes - Support country level stakeholder consultations
using the Commonwealth e-health methodology and
templates
25Thank you
The Commonwealth 53 nations one community