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  1. Article ; Online: Electronic aggregated data collection on cervical cancer screening in Bangladesh since 2014: what the data tells us?

    Nessa, Ashrafun / Hossain, Md Shahadat / Uddin, Sheikh Md Nazim / Islam, Md Rafiqul / Khan, Muhammad Abdul Hannan / Azad, Abul Kalam

    BMC public health

    2024  Volume 24, Issue 1, Page(s) 270

    Abstract: Introduction: To reduce the high prevalence of cervical cancers among the Bangladeshi women, the Government of Bangladesh established a national cervical cancer screening programme in 2005 for women aged 30 to 60 years. The District Health Information ... ...

    Abstract Introduction: To reduce the high prevalence of cervical cancers among the Bangladeshi women, the Government of Bangladesh established a national cervical cancer screening programme in 2005 for women aged 30 to 60 years. The District Health Information System Version 2 (DHIS2) based electronic aggregated data collection system is used since the year 2013. This study summarises data from the year 2014 to 2022 to assess the effectiveness of the electronic data collection system in understanding the outcome of the screening programme.
    Methods: This is a descriptive study based on secondary data extracted in MS Excel from the DHIS2-based electronic repository of the national cervical cancer screening programme of Bangladesh. The respondents were women aged 30-60 years, screened for cervical cancer using VIA (Visual Inspection of cervix with Acetic acid) method in 465 government health facilities. The data were collected on the participants' residential location, month and year of screening, name and type of health facilities performing VIA, and VIA screening results.
    Results: The national screening programme reported a total 3.36 million VIA tests from 465 government hospitals in 8 years (2014 to 2022). The national average VIA-positivity rate was 3.6%, which varied from 1.4 to 9.5% among the districts. This national screening programme witnessed an exponential growth, year after year, with 83.3% increase in VIA test from 2014 to 2022. The primary and the secondary care hospitals were the highest collective contributors of VIA tests (86.2%) and positive cases (77.8%). The VIA-positivity rates in different hospital types varied widely, 7.0% in the medical university hospital, 5.7% in the medical college hospitals, 3.9% in the district/general hospitals, and 3.0% in the upazila health complexes.
    Conclusions: A national cervical cancer screening programme using VIA method and a DHIS2-based electronic data collection backbone, is effective, sustainable, and useful to understand the screening coverage, VIA positivity rate and geographic distribution of the participants and case load to initiate policy recommendations and actions. Decentralization of the screening programme and more efforts at the primary and secondary care level is required to increase screening performances.
    MeSH term(s) Female ; Humans ; Bangladesh ; Data Collection ; Early Detection of Cancer ; Electronics ; Hospitals, District ; Uterine Cervical Neoplasms ; Adult ; Middle Aged
    Language English
    Publishing date 2024-01-23
    Publishing country England
    Document type Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
    ZDB-ID 2041338-5
    ISSN 1471-2458 ; 1471-2458
    ISSN (online) 1471-2458
    ISSN 1471-2458
    DOI 10.1186/s12889-023-17545-z
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  2. Article ; Online: Bangladesh's digital health journey: reflections on a decade of quiet revolution.

    Khan, Muhammad Abdul Hannan / Cruz, Valeria de Oliveira / Azad, Abul Kalam

    WHO South-East Asia journal of public health

    2019  Volume 8, Issue 2, Page(s) 71–76

    Abstract: Bangladesh has made remarkable progress in digital health in recent years. Through one of the world’s largest deployments to date of the open-source District Health Information Software 2 (DHIS2), the country now has a national public sector health data ... ...

    Abstract Bangladesh has made remarkable progress in digital health in recent years. Through one of the world’s largest deployments to date of the open-source District Health Information Software 2 (DHIS2), the country now has a national public sector health data warehouse. Information from previously fragmented data systems is now unified in a common data repository, enabling data exchange for health information systems and decision-making. Work is ongoing to create lifetime electronic health records for all citizens that can be transferred between health facilities. Extensive customization of open-source software has laid the foundations for a national digital networking system. Initiatives have focused on producing digital solutions to aid priorities such as strengthening the health system as a whole as well as supporting specific technical interventions, for example improving the civil registration and vital statistics system. Digital solutions have also supported the Bangladesh health workforce strategy through a set of registries that electronically captures and maintains human resource information for the entire public health sector, including monitoring staff attendance through the use of low-cost biometric fingerprint time-attendance machines. Citizens are encouraged to engage in shaping health services via a web-based complaints and suggestions system, and a new system to raise health awareness via public digital displays has started in Dhaka. Strong support at the highest political level has been critical to the success of efforts to introduce these innovations. The endeavour has also generated a cadre of enthusiastic eHealth proponents, who are focused on further strengthening and expanding the existing systems and on harnessing the vast amount of information amassed at the central data repository through big data analysis, artificial intelligence and machine learning.
    MeSH term(s) Bangladesh ; Data Warehousing ; Delivery of Health Care ; Health Information Systems ; Humans ; Inventions ; Public Health ; Telemedicine/organization & administration
    Language English
    Publishing date 2019-08-01
    Publishing country India
    Document type Editorial
    ZDB-ID 2676354-0
    ISSN 2304-5272 ; 2304-5272 ; 2224-3151
    ISSN (online) 2304-5272
    ISSN 2304-5272 ; 2224-3151
    DOI 10.4103/2224-3151.264849
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  3. Article: Governance and management of national telehealth programs in Asia.

    Marcelo, Alvin / Ganesh, Jai / Mohan, Jai / Kadam, D B / Ratta, B S / Kulatunga, Gumindu / John, Sheila / Chandra, Andry / Primadi, Oscar / Mohamed, Athika Abdul Sattar / Khan, Muhammad Abdul Hannan / Azad, Abul Alam / Marcelo, Portia

    Studies in health technology and informatics

    2015  Volume 209, Page(s) 95–101

    Abstract: Unlabelled: Telehealth and telemedicine are increasingly becoming accepted practices in Asia, but challenges remain in deploying these services to the farthest areas of many developing countries. With the increasing popularity of universal health ... ...

    Abstract Unlabelled: Telehealth and telemedicine are increasingly becoming accepted practices in Asia, but challenges remain in deploying these services to the farthest areas of many developing countries. With the increasing popularity of universal health coverage, there is a resurgence in promoting telehealth services. But while telehealth that reaches the remotest part of a nation is the ideal endpoint, such goals are burdened by various constraints ranging from governance to funding to infrastructure and operational efficiency.
    Objectives: enumerate the public funded national telehealth programs in Asia and determine the state of their governance and management.
    Method: Review of literature, review of official program websites and request for information from key informants.
    Conclusions: While there are national telehealth programs already in operation in Asia, most experience challenges with governance and subsequently, with management and sustainability of operations. It is important to learn from successful programs that have built and maintained their services over time. An IT governance framework may assist countries to achieve success in offering telehealth and telemedicine to their citizens.
    MeSH term(s) Asia ; Delivery of Health Care/organization & administration ; Leadership ; Models, Organizational ; National Health Programs/organization & administration ; Organizational Objectives ; Telemedicine/organization & administration
    Language English
    Publishing date 2015
    Publishing country Netherlands
    Document type Comparative Study ; Evaluation Studies ; Journal Article
    ISSN 0926-9630
    ISSN 0926-9630
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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