News & Views



“I dream of a better health system”

“Forgive me for dreaming – My dream for all our kids is that there will be a better South Africa one day. A South Africa where infant mortality will be a thing of the past.”

With these words Dr. Shaheen Khotu, Chief Information Officer (CIO) of the Department of Health, set the tone for South Africa’s eHealth strategy. The secret he said, to saving the 55 000 South African children destined to die this year in terms of infant mortality statistics is information and education. This includes information about the patients and education on growth monitoring and immunisation.

“If we implement an 80% successful immunisation programme,” said Khotu, “then I want to know the names of the children in the other 20%, their mothers’ names and their ID numbers, so they can be traced on entry into school and immunised.” This is the eHealth vision that Dr. Khotu carries.

Khotu said that since the advent of democracy, a number of health care improvements have been implemented. This includes free primary health care, and that the paradigms have shifted from curative to preventative, and from hospital-based to community-based.

“But it’s not enough,” he said, “we have a mandate from the government to implement an electronic health care system that begins at local level and feeds into district, provincial and national levels,” said Khotu.

Dr. Lincoln Moura, president of Zilics Health Care Systems, spoke earlier about the Sao Paulo model and how some South-to-South collaboration could benefit South Africa.

“In a city of over 12 million inhabitants,” he said, “we used open source java technology on a completely independent web-based platform to eliminate more than 150 silo-driven organisations.”

Dr. Moura outlined how the SIGA Saude eHealth programme in Sao Paulo is able to uniquely identify all individuals. This is regardless of whether these are patients, health care professionals or service providers. Using thin client technology, the information is entered once at the point of care, using simple machines. “All updates, new programmes and functionalities can be rolled out easily as the complexity resides in the data centre,” he said.

Between January 2005 and March 2007, electronic authorisations for specialised procedures increased by 66%. Asked how the project handled change management, Dr Moura responded that the electronic systems were modelled to be identical to the paper systems. This is to ensure that there was no new methodology to be learned.

“Offer staff an easier way to work and perform better, and they will use it,” he said.

Moura also confirmed that the Sao Paulo model is available free of charge to other health care agencies if they wish to use it. However, he emphasised that the focus of the SIGA Saude project is improved health care, not billing.

“Far too many countries implement an electronic system specifically for billing purposes,” he said, “but what we wanted for Sao Paulo was a system that can actually provide better information about the patient and where they can get the best possible treatment.”

Wise words and ones that Dr Khotu will most surely be able to identify with in his quest for an electronic system in South Africa.


         

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