HRIS In Focus The HRIS Strengthening Blog

IntraHealth CEO Champions Role of Informatics in Strengthening Health Workers 3 November 2008

Pape Gaye, IntraHealth’s president and CEO, discussed the challenges of building sub-Saharan Africa’s capacity in health care and information communication technology (ICT) at the Public Health Informatics conference in Seattle, Washington, on September 19. Gaye spoke as part of the plenary session “Decision Support for Public Health and Policy Development: Building Capacity and Sustainability.”

Gaye explained how IntraHealth’s Human Resources Information System (HRIS) development follows a systems strengthening approach. Gaye highlighted IntraHealth’s role in creating the Capacity Project’s Human Resources for Health Global Resource Center as well as the organization’s growing leadership in Health Workforce Informatics. Gaye suggested several areas for future development, including:

  • Strengthening linkages between technical schools and health institutions
  • Developing policy and advocacy strategies, with key stakeholder and decision-maker involvement
  • Fostering Centers of Excellence and “twinning” of educational institutions focused on south to south, south to north collaborations
  • Developing new cadres of health workers by attracting and engaging talent early.

Gaye concluded with the following points:

  • People working in ICT for health do not need to reinvent the wheel.
  • ICT development and capacity building should be done within the context of overall human resources for health capacity building, not outside of it.
  • There are exciting opportunities in eHealth for building capacity in ICT but also for using ICT to help build the capacity of health workers and better prepare them for their jobs.

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Leaders Explore How Technology Can Advance Health Care Globally 31 October 2008

Pape Gaye, IntraHealth’s President and CEO, recently participated in the Rockefeller Institute’s Bellagio Conference, Making the eHealth Connection. The conference brought thought leaders together to explore the use of public health informatics and national health information systems to improve health care in developing countries. Attendees included representatives from International NGOs, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the World Health Organization, countries throughout the world, and the symposium organizer, the University of Washington’s Center for Public Health Informatics.

Conference participants agreed that a weak infrastructure continues to challenge health care advancement in poorer areas, but the use of extant technologies such as cell phones and targeted development of internet-based solutions hold considerable promise in improving people’s access to health care.

IntraHealth’s Human Resources Information System (HRIS) development raised considerable interest. Developed for the USAID-funded Capacity Project, the HRIS strengthening process includes a suite of low-cost Open Source software solutions designed to be adaptable to countries’ varying HRIS needs. Other emerging workshop themes included using technology in emergency areas and for decision support, as well as using it to gather and disseminate evidence in policy development and to support front-line providers.

Participants at the workshop identified five key areas for advancing public health through informatics:

  • Strengthening the linkages between technologically strong schools and health institutions
  • Bringing the stakeholders and decision makers on board to embrace the technology
  • Developing centers of excellence through twinning strategies, with involvement of US-based institutions as well between those in the developing world
  • Developing new cadres in public health-related technology
  • Improving public health competencies by developing the health workforce.

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The 2008 Public Health Informatics Conference 30 September 2008

Pape Gaye, president of IntraHealth International, and Dykki Settle, IntraHealth’s Director of Informatics, recently attended the PHI2008 Conference, hosted by the University of Washington in Seattle. The theme was “Envisioning Options for Integrated Public Health Information Systems for Low Resource Settings: Components, Connections, Partners, Strategies.”

The conference is led by Global Partners in Public Health Informatics, an alliance of governmental and non-governmental organizations, academic institutions, private sector contributors, and individuals that looks for ways to use communication and information technologies to address health challenges in resource-poor settings around the world. The 2008 conference included representatives of more than 50 organizations working in public health. Attendees represented 15 countries.

Pape’s presentation brought capacity building to the attention of the conference by highlighting the need to use eHealth systems to expand the reach of health workers. His talk was unique in its focus on capacity building, in that the talks of other presenters generally fit within any one of several issues including the interoperability of information systems, strategies for developing national health systems, or coordinating eHealth initiatives.

The presentation reviewed the challenges and opportunities associated with capacity building and ICT within the HRH field. He detailed the advantages of the Performance Improvement (PI) approach for its impact on health workers in low resource settings, and outlined a model of PI that can be adapted for capacity building in eHealth. Learning for Performance, IntraHealth’s HRIS work, and the HRH Global Resource Center were all highlighted during the talk.

Here are the main takeaways from his presentation:

  • People working in ICT for health do not need to reinvent the wheel
  • ICT development and capacity building should be done within the context of overall HRH capacity building, not outside of it
  • There are exciting opportunities in eHealth for building capacity in ICT but also for how ICT can help build the capacity of health workers and better prepare them for their jobs (e.g. decision support systems)

The presentation also addressed the emergence of Generation Y, showing how eHealth initiatives represent an opportunity to expand the reach of people familiar with using technology and fluent with social networking. This part of the talk attracted particular interest from the audience in the Q and A that followed.

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The information provided on this website is not official U.S. Government information and does not represent the views or positions of the U.S. Agency for International Development or the U.S. Government. HRIS Strengthening is a program of the Capacity Project, a USAID-funded global project designed to strengthen human resources for health. The Capacity Project partnership is led by IntraHealth International, Inc.