Membership in the Steering Committee is primarily based on regional representation providing an opportunity for multiple countries to standardize support given. The OpenHIE Steering Committee’s mission is to provide fundamental guidance around community priorities and areas of emphasis to OpenHIE’s Operational Leadership Team which supports and guides overall daily operations and direction for the community driven on real world experiences. This “strategic” leadership will help to inform strategies, roadmaps, and future plans for the OpenHIE community.
Open Seats: Currently, the OpenHIE Steering Committee has two open seats for representation in the Americas.
Inaugural Members
East Africa
Andrew Likaka, MBBS, MPH | |
---|---|
Dr. Andrew Likaka is a medical doctor with postgraduate studies in Public Health, serving as the Director of the Quality Management and Digital Health Directorate in the Ministry of Health and Population in Malawi. He is responsible for providing strategic leadership and coordination of quality of care and digitalization in the health sector. He has led the process of establishing the Quality Management Directorate in the Ministry of Health in Malawi. Dr. Likaka is an Improvement Advisor (IHI) and a Global Health Specialist (University of Melbourne, Australia). He has expertise in health program design, implementation, and evaluation. He has been appointed to head the Digital Health Division in the Ministry of Health and Population, with an aim of championing the digitalization of the health sector as part of the government sectoral-wide reforms for efficiency. He has worked in various capacities from a Medical Officer, Senior Medical Officer, Chief Medical Officer, District Medical Officer, and District Health Officer in different Districts in Malawi. Dr. Likaka has facilitated development of various health policies and strategies. He is a National Coordinator of the Malawi Health Situation Room which is advancing data usage for strategic decision making through virtualization at all levels. Dr. Likaka is the Chair of the National Quality Commission for Health Systems in Malawi and has spent most of his career setting up new systems and developing policies to improve quality of health services in Malawi and SADC Region. He is a keynote speaker in many international quality conferences and leads the Global Network for Improving Quality of Care for mothers, newborns, children, adolescents, and youth, supported by WHO, UNICEF, UNFPA, USAID and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. He is the Principal Investigator of KUUNIKA Data for Action Project in Malawi and a member of OpenHIE. Dr. Likaka has helped develop National Malaria Policies, Guidelines, and Protocols for Malawi and SADC. He has been part of the Global Fund Grant Writing Team for Malawi since 2007 for HIV, TB, and Malaria proposals. He has provided advisory services to various Malaria Indicator Surveys conducted in Malawi as well as being a member of the Technical Working Group for Malaria. Currently, he is leading to establish a bio-epidemiological platform in Malawi using Covid-19 as a vehicle. |
Carol Kamasaka | |
---|---|
Carolyn Kamasaka stands as a highly accomplished digital health specialist with over a decade of dedicated expertise in the design, planning, implementation, and evaluation of digital health interventions across Uganda and various countries in sub-Saharan Africa. Her distinguished career is marked by a unique blend of skills and experiences that set her apart in the dynamic world of digital health.
|
Steven Wanyee, M.Sc | |
---|---|
Steven Wanyee is a formally trained biomedical and health informatics professional, and a digital health practitioner with over 25 years practising experience and expertise. During this time, he has supported more than 20 Ministries of Health in Africa to develop digital health policies, strategies, and various standards and guidelines to support their digital transformation in health journeys. He has designed, developed and led teams comprising diverse professionals in implementing digital interventions, services and applications in health predominantly in Africa. Steven runs a digital health engineering development firm, IntelliSOFT Consulting Limited (www.intellisoftkenya.com) based out of Nairobi which he founded in 2007. He is the Founder Secretary General of the Kenya Health Informatics Association (www.kehia.org), and the current President of HEalth INformatics in Africa, HELINA (www.helina.africa). He is well reknowned on the global level working closely with international organisations from the UN family such as WHO, UNICEF, ITU, World Bank, UNDP and others and aid agencies such as USAID, GIZ, US-CDC as well as continental bodies such as AfricaCDC, East Africa Community, IGAD and others to provide thought leadership and technical assistance in global digital health. Steven is currently a PhD student in information science focusing on health informatics. His research interests is in clinical decision support including how to optimize AI in health. He actively contributes to development and implementation of Standards-based, Machine-readable, Adaptive, Requirements-based, and Testable (SMART) guidelines. He believes that their effective implementation will significantly impact the contribution and participation of digital interventions, services and applications in health including enabling clinicians make better decisions particularly at the point of service. |
South East Asia
DR. ALVIN MARCELO, MD, CGEIT | |
Dr. Alvin Marcelo is a general and trauma surgeon by training, who is currently the director of the Asia eHealth Information Network (AeHIN) and the managing director of the Standards and Interoperability Lab for Asia (SIL-Asia). At the University of the Philippines Manila, Dr. Marcelo held various posts such as director of the National Telehealth Center and Chief of the Medical Informatics Unit. He co-established the Master of Science in Health Informatics program and conducted local and international research in the field of eHealth and health information systems development. He took his postdoctoral fellowship in medical informatics at the National Library of Medicine in Bethesda, Maryland with research interests in telepathology, mobile computing, and bibliometric analysis of MEDLINE content. Dr. Marcelo is certified in the governance of enterprise IT (CGEIT), The Open Group Architecture Framework (TOGAF), Archimate, and COBIT5 Implementation. Dr. Marcelo has previously held executive posts at the Philippine Health Insurance Corporation and St. Luke’s Medical Center. |
Boonchai Kijsanayotin, MD, PhD, FIAHSI, FRCP(T) | |
---|---|
Dr. Boonchai Kijsanayotin earned his medical degree from the Chulalongkorn University and Board Certified Internal Medicine and Preventive Medicine from Thai Medical Council. He spent 15 years working at rural public hospital as an internal medicine clinician. While he was working as a clinician in the hospital, he was also responsible for the Hospital Information System (HIS) and oversaw the hospital telemedicine station, one of Thai Ministry of Public Health (MoPH) Telemedicine project. In 2008, he received his MS. & Ph.D. in Health Informatics from University of Minnesota, USA. Currently, he is the health informatician and research manager at Thai Health Information Standards Development Center (THIS), an affiliated agency of the Health Systems Research Institute (HSRI), Ministry of Public Health, Thailand. He is also the chair of the Asian eHealth Information Network (AeHIN), vice president of Thai Medical Informatics Association (TMI), International representative of TMI for International Medical Informatics Association (IMIA), member of Thai Medical Council and Royal College of Physicians of Thailand. His working areas and research interest include eHealth in developing country especially Thailand, National health data standards and interoperability, Health Information Exchange (HIE), Electronic Health Records (EHR), Socio-technical aspect of Health Information Technology and Health/biomedical informatics education in Thailand. His current work is the development of Thai Medicines Terminology (TMT), the semantic standard for Thai pharmaceutical products. |
Latin America
Daniel Otzoy | |
---|---|
Daniel Otzoy is a Guatemalan Computer Science Engineer with postgraduate studies in Information Technology and Health Informatics. He is a digital health technical advisor at John Snow, Inc., a public health consulting firm dedicated to improving health equity for better health outcomes, primarily developing HIS activities in Africa and Southeast Asia with projects funded by USAID. A specialist in international digital transformation with +16 years of experience, Daniel has worked in Latin America and the Caribbean on Digital Health projects financed by PAHO/WHO, Inter-American Development Bank, World Bank, CDC, Global Fund, USAID and others. These projects have involved implementing technologies in public health and healthcare sectors; promoting the adoption of digital health strategies such as EHR/EMR, telemedicine, mHealth, and Public Health Information Systems, among others; and the adoption of health information and interoperability standards. His lengthy experience also includes working on digital transformation and cybersecurity projects in the security and justice sector in Guatemala and other Latin American countries, funded by USAID and UNODC. Daniel is co-founder and Executive Director of the Central American Network for Health Informatics (RECAINSA), an expert member of both the Digital Health working group of the ITU and UNESCO Broadband Commission as well as the global Digital Public Goods working group led by UNICEF and the Digital Public Goods Alliance, and president of the digital transformation commission of the International Organization of Telehealth and Telemedicine. |
Thank you to those who have previously served on the Steering Committee:
South East Asia
Vajira H. W. Dissanayake MBBS (Colombo), PhD (Nottingham), FNASSL, FIAHSI
Luke Bawo, B.Pharm., MPH, PhD