Litcius/Paper detail

Effects of real-time electronic data entry on HIV programme data quality in Lusaka, Zambia

Kaala Moomba, Anita Williams, Theodora Savory, Mwansa Lumpa, Phillip Chilembo, Hannock Tweya, Anthony Harries, Michael E. Herce

2020Public Health Action18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

SETTING: Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) clinics in five hospitals and five health centres in Lusaka, Zambia, which transitioned from daily entry of paper-based data records to an electronic medical record (EMR) system by dedicated data staff (Electronic-Last) to direct real-time data entry into the EMR by frontline health workers (Electronic-First). OBJECTIVE: To compare completeness and accuracy of key HIV-related variables before and after transition of data entry from Electronic-Last to Electronic-First. DESIGN: Comparative cross-sectional study using existing secondary data. RESULTS: Registration data (e.g., date of birth) was 100% complete and pharmacy data (e.g., antiretroviral therapy regimen) was <90% complete under both approaches. Completeness of anthropometric and vital sign data was <75% across all facilities under Electronic-Last, and this worsened after Electronic-First. Completeness of TB screening and World Health Organization clinical staging data was also <75%, but improved with Electronic-First. Data entry errors for registration and clinical consultations decreased under Electronic-First, but errors increased for all anthropometric and vital sign variables. Patterns were similar in hospitals and health centres. CONCLUSION: With the notable exception of clinical consultation data, data completeness and accuracy did not improve after transitioning from Electronic-Last to Electronic-First. For anthropometric and vital sign variables, completeness and accuracy decreased. Quality improvement interventions are needed to improve Electronic-First implementation.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineElectronic dataData qualityData entryPharmacyElectronic data captureElectronic health recordHealth recordsRegimenAnthropometryFamily medicinePediatricsMedical emergencyDatabaseHealth careComputer scienceClinical trialOperations managementSurgeryInternal medicineEconomicsEconomic growthMetric (unit)Electronic Health Records SystemsData Quality and ManagementMobile Health and mHealth Applications