Cultivating meaning: interpretive fine-tuning of a South African health information system

2002 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
pp. 183-211 ◽  
Author(s):  
M.P.A Thompson
Author(s):  
Million Mberi ◽  
Ray M Kekwaletswe

This paper discusses the acceptance and use of Health Information Systems in the context of South African Health Practitioners. The paper argues that ideally, Health Practitioners who adopt HIS are poised to significantly improve their operations and services, and thereby offering patient satisfaction and adequately cover operational costs. Despite the continued investment in information system, there is still limited research and knowledge into what influences or affect the use of the system by health practitioners. The paper addresses the inadequacy of literature in addressing the use of health information system by health practitioners, especially in the context of South Africa. To this point this study sought to explore and explain what affects the use of HIS by individuals.


Author(s):  
Themba Mutemaringa ◽  
Alexa Heekes ◽  
Mariette Smith ◽  
Nicki Tiffin ◽  
Andrew Boulle

IntroductionIncreasing use of digital medical records creates disparate data resources for the same health care client population; and harnessing the benefits of real-time health data requires effective data linkage. A South African Health Information Exchange (HIE) collates and links routine health data from multiple sources, running daily updates through an automated ETL process. Many existing deterministic and probabilistic algorithms link person-level data using demographic identifiers, and can be combined in an optimised methodological pipeline. The performance of such pipelines must be validated against known matched pairs. The HIE uses current algorithms for record linkage, but methods that rely on similar spelling, name frequency and phonetic matching have been optimised for non-African names, and are not as effective. ObjectivesWe assessed common problems arising in the linkage process in the HIE, using this information to compile a curated representative African validation database for optimising existing and new linkage pipelines. ResultsUsing current linkage algorithms, we have identified the proportion of duplicates in the last five years, ranging from 25% in 2015 and stabilising at 10% by 2019. Common causes of duplicates across the whole database include mismatch in first name (37%), surname (17%), date of birth (13%), sex (8%) and South African Identification Number (0.2%). Complications from new-born naming and records of twins affect >8% of all records, and temporary health identifiers assigned at birth, during emergency response, and during poor connectivity of facilities to the provincial patient master index affect 2% of records. ConclusionsBased on these data, we have constructed a South African-specific, representative validation dataset that contains linkage pairs that represent placeholder phrases for newborns prior to naming (e.g. “baby of”), language variations; twins; character insertions, substitution and omissions in names with similar spellings; frequencies of names in the general population; and similar-sounding names.


2018 ◽  
Vol 8 (10) ◽  
Author(s):  
Keith Horvath ◽  
◽  
Patricia Sengstack ◽  
Frank Opelka ◽  
Andrea Borondy Kitts ◽  
...  

Cardiology ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 1-7
Author(s):  
Aziez Ahmed ◽  
Parthak Prodhan ◽  
Beverly J. Spray ◽  
Elijah H. Bolin

Introduction: Tachydysrhythmias (TDS) frequently occur after complete repair of tetralogy of Fallot (TOF). However, not much is known about the effect of TDS on morbidity and mortality after TOF repair. We sought to assess the associations between TDS and mortality and morbidity after repair of TOF using a multicentre database. Materials and Methods: We identified all children aged 0–5 years in the Pediatric Health Information System who underwent TOF repair between 2004 and 2015. Codes for TDS were used to identify cases. Outcome variables were inpatient mortality and total length of stay (LOS). Univariate and multiple logistic and linear regression analyses were used to identify the effects of multiple risk factors, including TDS, on mortality and LOS. Results: A total of 7,749 patients met inclusion criteria, of which 1,493 (19%) had codes for TDS. There was no association between TDS and inpatient mortality. However, TDS were associated with 1.1 days longer LOS and accounted for 2% of the variation observed in LOS. Conclusion: After complete repair of TOF, TDS were not associated with mortality and appeared to have only a modest effect on LOS.


2021 ◽  
pp. 019459982110298
Author(s):  
Chengetai Mahomva ◽  
Yi-Chun Carol Liu ◽  
Nikhila Raol ◽  
Samantha Anne

Objective To determine the incidence of auditory neuropathy spectrum disorder (ANSD) and its risk factors among the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) population from 2009 to 2018 in the Pediatric Health Information System database. Study Design Retrospective national database review. Setting Population-based study. Methods The Pediatric Health Information System database was queried to identify patients ≤18 years old with NICU admission and ANSD diagnosis. Patient demographics, jaundice diagnosis, use of mechanical ventilation, extracorporeal membrane oxygenation, furosemide, and/or aminoglycosides were extracted. Multivariable linear regression was used to assess trends in incidence. Chi-square analysis was used to assess differences between patients with and without ANSD. Logistic regression was used to assess factors associated with ANSD. Results From 2009 to 2018, there was an increase in (1) NICU admissions from 14,079 to 24,851 ( P < .001), (2) total ANSD diagnoses from 92 to 1847 ( P = .001), and (3) annual total number of patients with ANSD and NICU admission increased from 4 to 16 ( P = .005). There was strong correlation between the increases in total number of NICU admissions and total ANSD diagnoses over time ( R = 0.76). The average ANSD incidence was 0.052% with no statistically significant change over 10 years. When compared with all NICU admissions, children with ANSD had a higher association with use of furosemide ( P < .001) and ventilator ( P < .001). Conclusion Despite a statistically significant increase in NICU admissions and total ANSD diagnosis, the incidence of ANSD in the NICU population has not increased from 2009 to 2018. Furosemide and mechanical ventilator use were associated with increased likelihood of ANSD.


Author(s):  
Anuchit Nirapai ◽  
Jittarporn Somchue ◽  
Pongsiri Chaikot ◽  
Nipa Kimsungnoen ◽  
Manas Sangworasil ◽  
...  

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