Summary
Background: There are problems of quality in maternity services at primary health care level
in South Africa. Many of these problems can be traced to non-adherence to the maternity
care guidelines and lack of tools to support clinic staff and managers in their roles.
Objective: The aim of this research was to investigate the utility of e-health (computerized)
decision support systems at addressing the problem of compliance of health workers
to the maternity care guidelines at primary health care in South Africa. At present
there are no documented studies on e-health clinical decision support systems for
primary health care in South Africa, though clinical decision support systems for
primary health care are listed as part of the e-health strategy of the National Department
of Health. Methods: An e-health decision support system named the Bacis (Basic Antenatal Care In-formation System) Program was developed, then implemented and evaluated at a primary health care
clinic. The duration of the study was two years: this includes development, implementation
and evaluation.
Results and Conclusion: There was an overall improvement in compliance from 85.1 % to 89.3%. This result
was not statistically significant. However when results were stratified into specific
categories, the Bacis Program showed statistically significant improvement in compliance
over the checklist system in three out of nine important categories. These are compliance
at booking, patients younger than 18 years and patients booking after week 20. Further,
insights and experience were also gained on development and implementation of clinical
information systems at resource strained environments such as primary health care
in South Africa. These results, insights and experience are invaluable for the implementation
of the proposed e-health strategy in South Africa.
Citation: Horner V, Rautenbach P, Mbanang N, Mashamba T, Kwinda H. An e-health decision support
system for improving compliance of health workers to the maternity care protocols
in South Africa. Appl Clin Inf 2013; 4: 25–36
http://dx.doi.org/10.4338/ACI-2012-10-RA-0044
Keywords
Clinical decision support systems - maternal health care - guideline adherence - primary
health care