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Date | Tags | Meeting Overview | Summary - What was shared | Recording and Notes |
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9 October 2024 | Treatment Continuity | Kenya Data Protection Act | Explored Kenya’s Digital Health Revolution: Insights into the new Digital Health Act, its Impact on Data Governance, and the challenges and lessons learned along the way. | |
25 September 2024 | Patient Identity Management | Identity Management Collaborative Session: Nigeria Experience | We continued to discuss what work countries are doing around patient identity management. This month focused on the work Nigeria is doing. The PHIS3 team helped us understand the context in which they have implemented a fingerprint-based patient identity solution for HIV/TB patients. We also learned how this approach supports health data integrity and access. This call helped community members understand the current process and performance of the PHIS3 identity management solution as well as the scope of the national identification number (NIN) and plan to incorporate NIN into PIM in Nigeria. Lastly, we discussed strategies for optimizing PHIS3's health identity framework. Topics included data quality assessment methods, approaches to match performance evaluation, and privacy-preserving record linkage. | |
12 September 2024 | Identifying & Resolving Data Issues | Data Use Community: Data Quality | A kick off discussion on data quality. Dr. Davies O. Kimanga, MD, Msc shared Kenya’s journey with data quality and we began forming a framework for sharing best practices in data management to optimize data quality. | |
28 August 2024 | Patient Identity Management | Identity Management Collaborative Session: Uruguay Experience | Collaborative call where will continued to discuss what work countries are doing around patient identity management. During this session we learned about the success and challenges from Uruguay! Uruguay has had patient matching in place for several years and they shared their journey to scale and sustain a country-wide patient matching strategy. | |
31 July 2024 | Patient Identity Management | Identity Management Collaborative Session: Zambia Experience | During this 90 minute session, the community continued the conversations on Patient Identity Management. Chisanga Siwale & Muya Mwansa with the Ministry of Health in Zambia presented on Zambia's patient identity management experiences. The presentation addressed various aspects of Zambia's health information systems. Key points included the current integration between Electronic Health Records (EHR) and laboratory data, with unique IDs linking lab results back to client records. Challenges driving the focus on creating a client registry include high rates of duplicate records, with estimates ranging from 10% to 33%. Discussions have been initiated with the Ministry of Home Affairs to integrate their Integrated National Registration Information System (INRIS) with health data, but progress is slow due to national issues. The Central Repository (CR) is planned to expand beyond lab data to include a Shared Health Record (SHR), but implementation depends on establishing standards and overcoming capacity issues. Software options for the CR include JEMPI, OpenHIM, and OpenCR. There are ongoing efforts to leverage tools like eLIS for deduplication and to assess the functionality of integrated systems. Current data submission processes involve Smartcare and web interfaces, with deduplication efforts planned at the national level. Advocating for enforcing the National ID number linked to payment for care was also suggested. | |
29 May 2024 | Patient Identity Management | Identity Management Collaborative Session: Tanzania Experience | Sosthenes Bagumhe & Kizito Mrema presented on Tanzania's National Health Client Registry. The discussion dove into the e-health strategy, notably spotlighting the implementation of the National Health Client Registry (NHCR). Established in collaboration with the CDC through MDH and MSH from 2018 to 2021, the NHCR operates without a singular patient identifier but employs unique identifiers, with widespread utilization across Tanzanian districts and integration with various health programs like immunization. Functionally, the NHCR registers clients, conducts deduplication and matching, resolves conflicts, and incorporates biometrics and identification authorities such as NIDA. Governance structures ensure system functionality and leadership at all health levels, while tools like Medic-CR, an open-source system, are employed. Privacy and security measures, including consent and resolution processes in the presence of clients, are rigorously maintained. Sustainability is ensured through sector-wide registry creation, technological leverage, and staff capacity building. Key lessons include the avoidance of siloed systems, the necessity of active CR service for effective electronic health record (EHR) integration, and mentorship to foster interoperability. During the Q&A, technical inquiries range from JSON usage to NHCR operational insights, while discussions extend to the potential future need for a dedicated CR and lessons from advanced countries, highlighting collaborative data-sharing patterns and international best practices. | |
9 May 2024 | Treatment Continuity | DUC Treatment Continuity: Zimbabwe Experience | the Organization for Public Health Interventions &Development (OPHID) team from Zimbabwe shared about their work using data/technology to support individuals currently within a HIV treatment continuity gap to return to services, specifically including activities such as Intensive outreach interventions & Targeted adherence (fitting interventions to individuals to get them back to care). | |
24 April 2024 | Patient Identity Management | Identity Management Collaborative Session: Rwanda Experience | Chief Digital Officer of Rwanda Ministry of Health, Sylvere Mugumya, joined this session & shared where Rwanda is currently at in their identity management HIE implementation journey. Rwanda uses national ID number to identity patients within the system. They are able to query this system to search for a matching record & pull the information for patients. This has greatly improved the speed of their registration process, but still has challenges ensuring all records contain complete & accurate information and are not duplicates. Rwanda is currently at the phase of focusing on interoperability between facilities to ensure adequate sharing of patient records while also maintaining privacy & security. Rwanda has taken great care to ensure personal identifying information privacy is maintained through an authentication process with the EMR. | |
11 April 2024 | Treatment Continuity | DUC Treatment Continuity: Transient populations | This meeting was focused on managing health data for transient/cross-border populations: challenges and solutions. The discuss centered on those who manage patients who are transient, receiving some of their care at external facilities, or receiving care across borders. During this session we heard community members in Malawi & Zambia share examples of how they are dealing with transient patient populations, the challenges faced, and how data or technology interventions have been or could be applied to improve patient care in these contexts. | |
27 March 2024 | Patient Identity Management | Identity Management Collaborative Session: Botswana Experience | During this Collaborative Identity Management session community members connected on patient identity management efforts. During this 60 minute session, the community heard from colleagues in Botswana about their implementations of a client registry and how that fits in their health information exchange. | |
1 February 2024 | Community Meeting | Annual Planning for 2024 | This was the 2024 kickoff meeting to collaboratively plan our community priorities & sessions for the new year. This 1-hour virtual meeting involved a quick summary of activities from 2023 & a collaborative session where participants shared suggestions for the Data Use Community in 2024. Prior to this meeting, we invited all community members to share their thoughts in the annual survey & read the 2023 Data Use Community review. | |
29 November 2023 | Patient Identity Management | Identity Management Collaborative Session | During this 90 minute session, the community continued the conversation on the Patient Identity Management Toolkit with an introduction to the Biometrics Module. This draft highlights the key considerations for implementing biometrics as part of identity management in health care and public health programs, and showcases case studies from previous DUC community events. There was no presentations during this session. Community members provided input based on their experience to validate, enrich, & improve the usefulness of the approach. With input, this approach will be refined over time & will serve as a shared knowledge base for patient matching activities. | |
25 October 2023 | Patient Identity Management | Identity Management Collaborative Session: Ethiopia Experience | Dawit Birhan & colleagues from Ethiopia shared about the patient identity management initiatives taking place in Ethiopia. They discussed their work to uniquely identify patients, use of biometrics, challenges / successes, and more! After the presentation, there was an open discussion lead by the community members questions. | |
12 October 2023 | Treatment Continuity | DUC HIV Treatment Continuity Gap: Palladium Kenya | The community discussed how the Palladium Kenya team is using data/technology to support individuals currently within a HIV treatment continuity gap to return to services, including activities such as targeted counseling and/or training on prevention and wellness to address patient missed appointments. Community members from Palladium Kenya shared their current efforts and we invite others to join the discussion. | |
27 September 2023 | Patient Identity Management | 90 minute session where the community continued the conversation on the Patient Identity Management Toolkit module focused on Implementing Person-Matching: Key Steps and Considerations. This draft outlines key steps for designing and implementing an effective approach for matching person-level records within and across health-related datasets. You can see the first draft here. There was no presentations during this session. Community members provided input based on their experiences to validate, enrich, & improve the usefulness of the approach. With community input, this approach will be refined over time & will serve as a shared knowledge base for patient matching activities. Please add your comments directly in the Matching Module Google document. | ||
14 September 2023 | Treatment Continuity | Treatment Continuity: The Nigerian Experience | ||
30 August 2023 | Patient Identity Management | Identity Management: Implementing Person Matching Working Session | A 90 minute community meeting that looked at key steps for designing & implementing an effective approach for matching person-level records within & across health related datasets. The intended audience was health IT systems managers, developers, data analysts, & program implementers with the objectives to describe the key phases in the patient matching process & the specific actions in each phase. Subject matter experts, Dr. Shaun Grannis & Dr. Toan Ong, walked through the phases of this approach & asked the Community to provide input based on their experience to validate, enrich, & improve the usefulness of the approach. With the community input, this approach will be refined over time & will serve as a shared knowledge base for patient matching activities. | |
26 July 2023 | Patient Identity Management | Presentation on Unique Patient Identification Management in Zimbabwe | Technical Project Lead Blessings Manyiyo along with Data Scientist Simbarashe Chaputsira & System Architect Patrick Mapuranga shared insights into the progress Zim-TTECH has made with unique patient identification management in Zimbabwe. ZIM-TTECH is a Zimbabwe local partner for Technical Assistance, Training, & Education for Health. A robust Q&A session followed this presentation where they expanded upon challenges, policies, accuracy, and more. | |
28 June 2023 | Patient Identity Management | Presentation on Rwandan Health Information Exchange related to Identity Management | Loic Ntwali & Frank Kitema shared insight into the identity management work that is happening in Rwanda regarding health information exchange. Rwanda uses national ID number to identity patients within the system. They are able to query this system to search for a matching record & pull the information for patients. This has greatly improved the speed of their registration process, but still has challenges ensuring all records contain complete & accurate information and are not duplicates. | |
8 June 2023 | Treatment Continuity | Intrahealth READI Approach being used within Central America for management of HIV clients | Amy Finnegan and Lucy Mphuru from IntraHealth shared the READI approach & how it has been used within Central America for management of HIV clients and their lessons learnt. READI stands for Rapid, Efficient, and Data-Driven Implementation. READI monitors program performance, accelerates project start-up, and conducts precision analyses that helps solve implementation problems before they start. | |
26 April 2023 | Patient Identity Management | How countries are linking person level data systems together in a National Data Repository (NDR) | Gibril Gomez with PHIS3 shared about the National Biometrics Collaborative work happening in Nigeria. Nigeria is working to move away from traditional biometric fingerprint capturing to a national Patient Identity Management System (PIMS) implementation. | |
29 March 2023 | Patient Identity Management | How countries are linking person level data systems together in a National Data Repository (NDR)? | Christina White and Piotr Mankowski of DIGI ITECH-UW shared about the Client Registry work in Haiti to improve the ability to provide high quality care to patients to move between services, facilities and networks. Brett Onions from Luke International shared about the Demographics Data Exchange (DDE), the Master Patient Index (MPI) for Malawi, currently being developed by EGPAF in Malawi. Both presentations provided an overview of the current implementations and the attendees had the opportunity to ask questions that ranged from details on the technology and matching process. | |
9 March 2023 | Treatment Continuity | Reducing Congestion at Health Facilities |
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9 February 2023 | Metrics & Reporting | Community metrics and reporting workshop | This 90 minute virtual workshop was designed to take a deeper look at the metrics calculation and reporting processes with the goals of supporting and strengthening countries as they work toward using patient-level data for generating metrics for program planning, patient care and decision making. Goals of the session included:
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22 February 2023 | Patient Identity Management | Unique Patient Identification (UPI) in Kenya. Presented by Dr. Joseph Sitienei, MoH Kenya Uniquely identifying patients is a critical component of Kenya’s efforts to deliver Universal Health Coverage (UHC) to everyone living within the country. Dr. Sitienei shared the strategy and the steps that the Kenyan government took to help ensure the implementation and acceptability of a UPI system to uniquely identify patients and deliver optimum health care. These steps included leveraging the country’s national person identification system and involving the community to “own” the process. Dr. Sitienei also shared various challenges faced throughout this process and solutions. As a next step the government and MOH will work to implement the UPI policy country-wide and eventually expand it include biometric identifiers. | ||
29 November 2022 | Patient Identity Management |
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16 November 2022 | Community Meeting | Where has the DUC been and where is the DUC going? | ||
7 September 2022 | Treatment Continuity | Data Use Acceleration and Learning (DUAL) |
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29 September 2022 | Metrics & Reporting | Evolution and Use of National Systems |
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24 August 2022 | Patient Identity Management | Biometrics Collaborative Session | The call consisted of community members sharing information and experiences regarding using Biometrics for identity management.
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27 July 2022 | Patient Identity Management | DUC & OHIE Collaborative Session for Patient Identity Management Toolkit | ||
13 June 2022 | Patient Identity Management | DUC Collaborative Session for Patient Identity Management Toolkit | ||
22 June 2022 | Patient Identity Management | DUC Collaborative Session for Patient Identity Management Toolkit | ||
11 May 2022 | Patient Identity Management | DUC Collaborative Session: Patient Identity Management | ||
31 March 2022 | Patient Identity Management | Patient Identity Workshop | The following is a summary of the current identity practices that were shared:
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8 February 2022 | HIV Treatment Continuity | Data Integration Across Facilities: Determining a Patient's Real Treatment Continuity | This meeting focused on the topic of "Data Integration Across Facilities: Determining a Patient’s Real Treatment Continuity." The community participated in a conversation on identified patterns used to integrate patient-level data across facilities to better discern true HIV retention for an individual.
Following these presentations was a Q&A to dive deeper into the details shared and the speakers also spoke to more technical-level processes from their experience. | |
9 November 2021 | Metrics & Reporting | From Patient-Level Data to Indicator Reporting: Exploring Country Patterns | This meeting focused on the topic of "From Patient-Level Data to Indicator Reporting: Exploring Country Patterns." The community took a look at the state of metrics reporting, promoted learning across contexts by hearing from individual country experiences on reporting patterns and data flows. We also heard some emerging work that impact reporting standards and processes. Community members Jennifer Shivers and Jason Knueppel lead this call. Jason shared more on the PEPFAR and Ministry of Health Data Alignment Activity as an example to help understand the full HIV landscape and better define targeted interventions. We were then introduced to community members who shared more about the approaches they are involved in for indicator reporting on this call:
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12 October 2021 | Community Meeting | Synthesizing & Shaping: Where We've Been and Where We're Going | This meeting synthesized conversations from previous meetings that dug deeper into the working model which was first introduced in the March 2021 community meeting. The October meeting focus was on sharing an overview of the interventions that have been shared with the community to date. The meeting was also designed to get feedback and input from community members on additional needs and topics that the community would like to see addressed. Paul Biondich, a community lead for the Data Use Community, started the presentation by sharing background on the formation of this community along with its mission, purpose, and the progress we've made to date. Paul then shared how we've organized this through the field experiences that have been shared on this call by creating a framework/working model now titled, "Technical Interventions Framework (TIF): HIV Treatment Continuity". The TIF was made to start creating common understanding of implementer approaches through agreeing on a common way to talk about / look at HIV treatment continuity. Next, Olivia shared about a project to create canvases across interventions in the TIF. The Touchpoint Canvas is a visual framework for understanding different components of an intervention. Following this presentation, Kasey Upchurch, led a feedback session for input on how community members have felt about this community so far and the direction they would like to see for the future of the DUC. | |
14 September 2021 | Treatment Continuity | Touchpoint Interventions: Proactive Adherence Counseling | Teams presented on the following:
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10 August 2021 | Treatment Continuity | Using Patient Record Systems to Generate | These two presentations shared on the following:
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8 June 2021 | Treatment Continuity | Touchpoint Interventions: Missed Appointment Reminders | These three presentations shared on the following:
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11 May 2021 | Treatment Continuity | Touchpoint Interventions: Pre-Appointment Support | These three presentations shared on the following:
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13 April 2021 | Treatment Continuity | Touchpoint Intervention: Reactive Adherence Counseling | Three presentations were featured on this call to share experiences with this touchpoint.
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9 March 2021 | Community Meeting | Bringing it Together: Lessons Learned So Far | This meeting was a collaborative working session to look at version one of our working model. The model is an attempt to describe the care process around HIV treatment continuity, rather than a formal model that describes the entire care cascade and the way data flows. The purpose of the model is to help build a common language and understanding of what we are learning through the DUC and provide a framework for sharing that information. |
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9 February 2021 | Treatment Continuity | Medical Records and Continuity of Treatment (Retention) | This meeting featured short presentations from national EMR implementers discussing how these tools are used in the continuity of treatment (retention):
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12 January 2021 | Treatment Continuity | Approaches for Patient Reminders and Tracking | The meeting featured three presentations of solutions for patient reminders and tracking:
The slides for each of the presentations can be accessed from the DUC Discourse page. | |
11 November 2020 | Patient Identity Management | Identity Linking and Opportunities for Partnership | Richard Stanley of IntraHealth gave a presentation on identity linking. Richard explained that tools to link patients across systems will make it easier to use clinical data for care coordination, reporting, monitoring, surveillance, and research. For example, being able to determine that a patient is receiving care in another facility without having to rely on direct outreach efforts. Dr. Stanley described a client registry, or enterprise master patient index (eMPI), which is an authoritative, standardized, and up-to-date list of patients that uses matching methods that compare demographic identifiers to link patient identities. | |
13 October 2020 | Treatment Continuity | Sharing Field Experiences: Engaging and Building Impact Squads | During this month’s meeting several members shared their experiences:
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01 September 2020 | Treatment Continuity | Community Formation Moving Forward - Structured for Impact | Introduced a new collaboration tool, Discourse. This tool will allow us to archive discussions that take place during meetings and serve as a forum to continue conversations after the end of the meetings. You may access the DUC Discourse Tool at https://discourse.duc.ohie.org/. During the meeting we noted three areas related to LTFU/retention to stimulate conversation:
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21 July 2020 | Treatment Continuity | HIV/AIDS Treatment Retention Outcomes: Field Perspectives on Data Use | Speakers from Kenya and Nigeria who discussed electronic medical record (EMR) implementations where patient-level data is collected and merged into a shared health record and/or data warehouse that allows for analysis and reporting of data. | |
16 June 2020 | Community Meeting | DUC Meeting–Kick-off | Practitioners presented their experiences and research from Mozambique, Uganda, and Zambia on viral load suppression, root causes of missed appointments, understanding LTFU, and clinical mentoring to health care providers. This led to a rich discussion on the role of patient experience and satisfaction in retention in care as well as information systems investments made to improve retention, given limited resources. Several practitioners on the call noted that rudeness and poor treatment of patients are common in many facilities. These negative experiences occur from reception through provider interactions. There are little data available to practitioners about patient experience and its impact on LTFU. Further, practitioners noted that interventions to improve health workers' attitudes towards patient and patient satisfaction have not been widely disseminated. |