Implementing Electronic Health Records in Primary Care Using the Theory of Change: Nigerian Case Study

BackgroundDigital health has been a tool of transformation for the delivery of health care services globally. An electronic health record (EHR) system can solve the bottleneck of paper documentation in health service delivery if it is successfully implemented, but poor implem...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Taiwo Adedeji, Hamish Fraser, Philip Scott
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2022-08-01
Series:JMIR Medical Informatics
Online Access:https://medinform.jmir.org/2022/8/e33491
_version_ 1797734868564574208
author Taiwo Adedeji
Hamish Fraser
Philip Scott
author_facet Taiwo Adedeji
Hamish Fraser
Philip Scott
author_sort Taiwo Adedeji
collection DOAJ
description BackgroundDigital health has been a tool of transformation for the delivery of health care services globally. An electronic health record (EHR) system can solve the bottleneck of paper documentation in health service delivery if it is successfully implemented, but poor implementation can lead to a waste of resources. The study of EHR system implementation in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) is of particular interest to health stakeholders such as policy makers, funders, and care providers because of the efficiencies and evidence base that could result from the appropriate evaluation of such systems. ObjectiveWe aimed to develop a theory of change (ToC) for the implementation of EHRs for maternal and child health care delivery in LMICs. The ToC is an outcomes-based approach that starts with the long-term goals and works backward to the inputs and mediating components required to achieve these goals for complex programs. MethodsWe used the ToC approach for the whole implementation’s life cycle to guide the pilot study and identify the preconditions needed to realize the study’s long-term goal at Festac Primary Health Centre in Lagos, Nigeria. To evaluate the maturity of the implementation, we adapted previously defined success factors to supplement the ToC approach. ResultsThe initial ToC map showed that the long-term goal was an improved service delivery in primary care with the introduction of EHRs. The revised ToC revealed that the long-term change was the improved maternal and child health care delivery at Festac Primary Health Center using EHRs. We proposed a generic ToC map that implementers in LMICs can use to introduce an optimized EHR system, with assumptions about sustainability and other relevant factors. The outcomes from the critical success factors were sustainability: the sustained improvements included trained health care professionals, a change in mindset from using paper systems toward digital health transformation, and using the project’s laptops to collect aggregate data for the District Health Information System 2–based national health information management system; financial: we secured funding to procure IT equipment, including servers, laptops, and networking, but the initial cost of implementation was high, and funds mainly came from the funding partner; and organizational: the health professionals, especially the head of nursing and health information officers, showed significant commitment to adopting the EHR system, but certain physicians and midwives were unwilling to use the EHR system initially until they were persuaded or incentivized by the management. ConclusionsThis study shows that the ToC is a rewarding approach to framing dialogue with stakeholders and serves as a framework for planning, evaluation, learning, and reflection. We hypothesized that any future health IT implementation in primary care could adapt our ToC approach to their contexts with necessary modifications based on inherent characteristics.
first_indexed 2024-03-12T12:49:47Z
format Article
id doaj.art-a334ac4ab0d54d169159612993c88e02
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2291-9694
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-12T12:49:47Z
publishDate 2022-08-01
publisher JMIR Publications
record_format Article
series JMIR Medical Informatics
spelling doaj.art-a334ac4ab0d54d169159612993c88e022023-08-28T22:52:08ZengJMIR PublicationsJMIR Medical Informatics2291-96942022-08-01108e3349110.2196/33491Implementing Electronic Health Records in Primary Care Using the Theory of Change: Nigerian Case StudyTaiwo Adedejihttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-7201-7202Hamish Fraserhttps://orcid.org/0000-0003-4383-2854Philip Scotthttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-6289-4260 BackgroundDigital health has been a tool of transformation for the delivery of health care services globally. An electronic health record (EHR) system can solve the bottleneck of paper documentation in health service delivery if it is successfully implemented, but poor implementation can lead to a waste of resources. The study of EHR system implementation in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) is of particular interest to health stakeholders such as policy makers, funders, and care providers because of the efficiencies and evidence base that could result from the appropriate evaluation of such systems. ObjectiveWe aimed to develop a theory of change (ToC) for the implementation of EHRs for maternal and child health care delivery in LMICs. The ToC is an outcomes-based approach that starts with the long-term goals and works backward to the inputs and mediating components required to achieve these goals for complex programs. MethodsWe used the ToC approach for the whole implementation’s life cycle to guide the pilot study and identify the preconditions needed to realize the study’s long-term goal at Festac Primary Health Centre in Lagos, Nigeria. To evaluate the maturity of the implementation, we adapted previously defined success factors to supplement the ToC approach. ResultsThe initial ToC map showed that the long-term goal was an improved service delivery in primary care with the introduction of EHRs. The revised ToC revealed that the long-term change was the improved maternal and child health care delivery at Festac Primary Health Center using EHRs. We proposed a generic ToC map that implementers in LMICs can use to introduce an optimized EHR system, with assumptions about sustainability and other relevant factors. The outcomes from the critical success factors were sustainability: the sustained improvements included trained health care professionals, a change in mindset from using paper systems toward digital health transformation, and using the project’s laptops to collect aggregate data for the District Health Information System 2–based national health information management system; financial: we secured funding to procure IT equipment, including servers, laptops, and networking, but the initial cost of implementation was high, and funds mainly came from the funding partner; and organizational: the health professionals, especially the head of nursing and health information officers, showed significant commitment to adopting the EHR system, but certain physicians and midwives were unwilling to use the EHR system initially until they were persuaded or incentivized by the management. ConclusionsThis study shows that the ToC is a rewarding approach to framing dialogue with stakeholders and serves as a framework for planning, evaluation, learning, and reflection. We hypothesized that any future health IT implementation in primary care could adapt our ToC approach to their contexts with necessary modifications based on inherent characteristics.https://medinform.jmir.org/2022/8/e33491
spellingShingle Taiwo Adedeji
Hamish Fraser
Philip Scott
Implementing Electronic Health Records in Primary Care Using the Theory of Change: Nigerian Case Study
JMIR Medical Informatics
title Implementing Electronic Health Records in Primary Care Using the Theory of Change: Nigerian Case Study
title_full Implementing Electronic Health Records in Primary Care Using the Theory of Change: Nigerian Case Study
title_fullStr Implementing Electronic Health Records in Primary Care Using the Theory of Change: Nigerian Case Study
title_full_unstemmed Implementing Electronic Health Records in Primary Care Using the Theory of Change: Nigerian Case Study
title_short Implementing Electronic Health Records in Primary Care Using the Theory of Change: Nigerian Case Study
title_sort implementing electronic health records in primary care using the theory of change nigerian case study
url https://medinform.jmir.org/2022/8/e33491
work_keys_str_mv AT taiwoadedeji implementingelectronichealthrecordsinprimarycareusingthetheoryofchangenigeriancasestudy
AT hamishfraser implementingelectronichealthrecordsinprimarycareusingthetheoryofchangenigeriancasestudy
AT philipscott implementingelectronichealthrecordsinprimarycareusingthetheoryofchangenigeriancasestudy