A System to Support Diverse Social Program Management

Background: Social programs are services provided by governments, nonprofits, and other organizations to help improve the health and well-being of individuals, families, and communities. Social programs aim to deliver services effectively and efficiently, but they are challenged by information silos...

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Veröffentlicht in:JMIR medical informatics 2021-08, Vol.9 (8), p.e23219-e23219, Article 23219
Hauptverfasser: McKillop, Mollie, Snowdon, Jane, Willis, Van C., Alevy, Shira, Rizvi, Rubina, Rewalt, Karen, Lefebvre-Paille, Charlyne, Kassler, William, Jackson, Gretchen Purcell
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container_end_page e23219
container_issue 8
container_start_page e23219
container_title JMIR medical informatics
container_volume 9
creator McKillop, Mollie
Snowdon, Jane
Willis, Van C.
Alevy, Shira
Rizvi, Rubina
Rewalt, Karen
Lefebvre-Paille, Charlyne
Kassler, William
Jackson, Gretchen Purcell
description Background: Social programs are services provided by governments, nonprofits, and other organizations to help improve the health and well-being of individuals, families, and communities. Social programs aim to deliver services effectively and efficiently, but they are challenged by information silos, limited resources, and the need to deliver frequently changing mandated benefits. Objective: We aim to explore how an information system designed for social programs helps deliver services effectively and efficiently across diverse programs. Methods: This viewpoint describes the configurable and modular architecture of Social Program Management (SPM), a system to support efficient and effective delivery of services through a wide range of social programs and lessons learned from implementing SPM across diverse settings. We explored usage data to inform the engagement and impact of SPM on the efficient and effective Results: The features and functionalities of SPM seem to support the goals of social programs. We found that SPM provides fundamental management processes and configurable program-specific components to support social program administration; has been used by more than 280,000 caseworkers serving more than 30 million people in 13 countries; contains features designed to meet specific user requirements; supports secure information sharing and collaboration through data standardization and aggregation; and offers configurability and flexibility, which are important for digital transformation and organizational change. Conclusions: SPM is a user-centered, configurable, and flexible system for managing social program workflows.
doi_str_mv 10.2196/23219
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Social programs aim to deliver services effectively and efficiently, but they are challenged by information silos, limited resources, and the need to deliver frequently changing mandated benefits. Objective: We aim to explore how an information system designed for social programs helps deliver services effectively and efficiently across diverse programs. Methods: This viewpoint describes the configurable and modular architecture of Social Program Management (SPM), a system to support efficient and effective delivery of services through a wide range of social programs and lessons learned from implementing SPM across diverse settings. We explored usage data to inform the engagement and impact of SPM on the efficient and effective Results: The features and functionalities of SPM seem to support the goals of social programs. We found that SPM provides fundamental management processes and configurable program-specific components to support social program administration; has been used by more than 280,000 caseworkers serving more than 30 million people in 13 countries; contains features designed to meet specific user requirements; supports secure information sharing and collaboration through data standardization and aggregation; and offers configurability and flexibility, which are important for digital transformation and organizational change. 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subjects Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Medical Informatics
Science & Technology
Viewpoint
title A System to Support Diverse Social Program Management
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