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This page is under construction and is not a complete list of scenarios. |
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Below you will find current and/or future scenarios for the use of OpenHIE architecture. These scenarios are about the people and the value that better health information can have on their life (ie. Mosa). To the left of these scenarios you will find a list of components used to make up a specific scenarios HIE architecture (ie. OHIE and other HIS components). Finally, you can click on workflows which will describe the transactions / interactions between the components that make everything work "behind the curtain". |
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Use Cases or Data Exchanges - aggregate reporting from EMR to HMIS, case reporting from EMR to SHR, facility source to HMIS
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Workflow - transactions/internactions
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Case-Based Reporting
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https://drive.google.com/open?id=1GQHBuKgZD6GRM6OzOzAq7fR7Lvj9WPVd
Immunization 1
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The characters in the child immunization scenario are:
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a village elder who uses an mHealth application (mHealth app) to record basic information about the birth of a new baby in the village the mum, who has just delivered a new baby during an at-home birth in her village the baby who will be issued an immunization card with a barcode ID sticker on it an immunization nurse who works at a rural clinic that tracks vaccinations using an “engineered” paper form that is preprinted with optical mark recognition (OMR) data capture areas an immunization nurse at an urban immunization clinic that is able to use the web-based online immunization registry application (GIIS) to track immunization events a District Immunization & Vaccination Officer, DIVO, who leverages a form scanning application (Form Scanner) and an online immunization registry application (GIIS) to track immunization events, vaccine inventory, and the supply chain transactions needed to ensure vaccine stocks are maintained at all the clinics in the district an MOH data analyst who uses a national health management information system (DHIS2) to track immunization programme metrics and indicators.
The immunization story progresses in 5 acts;
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Part 2 of the story, the mum brings her 6-week old baby to the local rural immunization clinic. At the clinic, the mum is given the child’s immunization card. Specific demographic details (including the SMS code from the elder, if the mum has it) are captured for the mum and the child, and these are hand-written on a paper form. A barcode sticker is placed at the top of the immunization card indicating the child’s unique ID#. An identical sticker is placed on the paper form beside the baby’s demographic information. The child is weighed and given his 6-week vaccinations. These details are recorded on the paper form beside his barcode sticker and onto his immunization card, which his mum keeps.
Part 3 of the story takes place at the DIVO’s office. It is month-end, and the nurse from the rural clinic has brought the hand-entered forms and the filled-in scannable forms to the DIVO for data entry into the online immunization registry (GIIS). For each newborn baby, the information is hand-entered into GIIS. For babies who are already in the database, their immunization transactions are scanned from the filled-in “OMR” forms. [NOTE: Transactions entered into the immunization registry (GIIS) are batch-updated to the HIE (see endnote).] After the data entry and scanning is completed, the DIVO prints a new set of scannable forms for the nurse to take back to
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Immunization 2
Interoperability; antenatal care, child immunization case-based malaria care
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Facility Registry
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