Overcoming limitations of tuberculosis information systems: researcher and clinician perspectives

Setting: Tuberculosis (TB) diagnosis and treatment requires patients to have multiple encounters with health care systems and the different stakeholders who play a role in curing them to coordinate their efforts. To optimize this process, high-quality, readily available data are required. Data syste...

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Veröffentlicht in:Public health action 2019-09, Vol.9 (3), p.120-127
Hauptverfasser: van der Heijden, Y. F., Hughes, J., Dowdy, D. W., Streicher, E., Chihota, V., Jacobson, K. R., Warren, R., Theron, G.
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container_end_page 127
container_issue 3
container_start_page 120
container_title Public health action
container_volume 9
creator van der Heijden, Y. F.
Hughes, J.
Dowdy, D. W.
Streicher, E.
Chihota, V.
Jacobson, K. R.
Warren, R.
Theron, G.
description Setting: Tuberculosis (TB) diagnosis and treatment requires patients to have multiple encounters with health care systems and the different stakeholders who play a role in curing them to coordinate their efforts. To optimize this process, high-quality, readily available data are required. Data systems to facilitate these linkages are a neglected priority which, if weak, fundamentally undermine TB control interventions.Objective: To describe lessons learnt from the use of programmatic data for TB patient care and research.Design: We did a survey of researcher and clinical provider experiences with information systems and developed a tiered approach to addressing frequently reported barriers to high-quality care.Results: Unreliable linkages, incomplete data, lack of a reliable unique patient identifier, and lack of data management expertise were the most important data-related barriers to high-quality patient care and research. We propose the creation of health service delivery environments that facilitate, prioritize, and evaluate high-quality data entry during patient or specimen registration.Conclusion: An integrated approach, focused on high-quality data, and centered on unique patient identification will form the foundation for linkages across health systems that reduce patient management errors, bolster surveillance, and enhance the quality of research based on programmatic data.
doi_str_mv 10.5588/pha.19.0014
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source DOAJ Directory of Open Access Journals; Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek - Frei zugängliche E-Journals; PubMed Central
subjects Data Quality
Matching
Original
Patient Identification
Record Linkage
title Overcoming limitations of tuberculosis information systems: researcher and clinician perspectives
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