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Usability and Acceptability of Electronic Immunization Registry Data Entry Workflows From the Health Care Worker Perspective in Siaya, Kenya (Part 3): Pre-Post Study. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • - The Kenya Ministry of Health and the International Training and Education Center for Health Kenya implemented an electronic immunization registry (EIR) system in Siaya County to tackle issues associated with paper-based clinic records, focusing on how healthcare workers (HCWs) perceive its usability and acceptability.
  • - A mixed methods study involving interviews at six facilities assessed HCWs' experiences with the EIR before and after testing three different workflows: fully paperless data entry, pre-visit appointment diaries, and a combination of both.
  • - Results showed that HCWs found the EIR workflows largely usable and acceptable, with the fully paperless workflow being the most positively received, leading to benefits such as improved clinical decision-making and reduced data entry mental

Article Abstract

Background: Digital health tools such as electronic immunization registries (EIRs) have the potential to improve patient care and alleviate the challenges that arise from the use of paper-based clinic records for reporting. To address some of these challenges, the Kenya Ministry of Health and the International Training and Education Center for Health Kenya implemented an EIR system in 161 immunizing clinics in Siaya County between 2018 and 2019. The successful implementation of digital health tools depends on many factors, one of which is alignment between the technology and the context in which it is used. One important aspect of that implementation context is the perceptions of the health care workers (HCWs) using the EIR.

Objective: This study aimed to evaluate HCWs' perceptions of the usability and acceptability of multiple clinic workflows using the new EIR.

Methods: We performed a mixed methods pre-post study using semistructured interviews with HCWs at 6 facilities in Siaya County, Kenya. We interviewed HCWs at each facility 4 times: at baseline and once after the implementation of 3 different workflow modifications (n=24 interviews). The baseline state was dual data entry with paper records and the EIR. We then implemented 3 workflow modifications for 1 full day each: fully paperless data entry, preparation of an appointment diary before patient visits for the day, and a combination of the 2 workflows. We compared ratings and themes across interviews after each of the 4 workflows to understand the changes in the usability and acceptability of the EIR.

Results: HCWs considered the EIR clinic workflows to be usable and acceptable. Of the modified workflows, HCWs perceived the fully paperless workflow most favorably. In all workflows, HCWs' perceived benefits included ease of clinical decision-making using the EIR, reduced mental burden of data entry when using the EIR, and ease of identification of errors. Perceived barriers to the workflow included contextual challenges such as staffing shortages and lack of network connectivity, EIR platform challenges such as errors in saving records and missing fields, and workflow challenges such as the dual data entry burden of using paper and digital tools simultaneously.

Conclusions: Fully paperless EIR implementation shows great promise from a workflow acceptability standpoint, contingent upon the presence of supporting contextual clinic factors and the resolution of system performance and design challenges. Rather than trying to identify a singular best workflow, future efforts should provide adequate flexibility for HCWs to implement the new system in their unique clinic context. Future EIR implementation stands to benefit from continued monitoring of EIR adoption acceptability during implementation, both for Siaya's program and for other efforts around the globe, as digital health interventions become more widely used.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10131729PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/39383DOI Listing

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