Partners In Health Haiti EMR

Partners In Health Haiti EMR

The Partners In Health (PIH) program in Haiti, known locally as Zanmi Lasante (ZL), operates clinics and hospitals at 12 sites across the Central Plateau and the lower Artibonite, two of the country's poorest regions.  Zanmi Lasante connects vulnerable people in Haiti to comprehensive health care services and HIV prevention while working in support of the Ministry of Health’s goal of universal treatment coverage.  

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Across all of our sites, PIH/ZL prioritizes systems that support high-quality, longitudinal care for our patients.

Beginning in 2009, ZL OpenMRS implementations were introduced for MDRTB, Primary Care, Physical Rehabilitation, and Mental Health at ZL health facilities.  PIH/ZL expanded the stable, point-of-care OpenMRS EMR (built on OpenMRS V2) utilized at University Hospital at Mirebalais to our supported clinics at Thomonde Health Center in Thomonde, Haiti and Lacolline Health Center in Lascahobas, Haiti for primary care.  Based on experiences at Thomonde and Lacolline Health Centers, additional EMRs are used at ALL Zanmi Lasante Health Centers and Hospitals.

OpenMRS is used now at all ZL health facilites.

The ZL EMR is expanded for Maternal Child Health, HIV, NCD, Pathology tracking, Oncology, Surgery, Labs, and Pharmacy. Patients are identified with ID cards and alternative identification technology (ie. fingerprinting). PIH and ZL continue to collaborate with the Haiti Ministry of Health (MSPP) and other important Haiti-based partners. We have consistent EMR systems at all our ZL and other PIH health facilities. There are records for almost 1 million patients.

History

This timeline describes the various ZL EMR systems between 2001 and 2016.  All these systems are built with OpenMRS.

The Thomonde EMR started capturing patient registration and visit notes in October 2016, after a training program of registration staff and clinicians.  The Lacolline EMR (V2) started on December 5, 2016.  60K patient demographics records were migrated from the Lacolline EMR V1.  These were patients who were seen at the Lacolline outpatient clinic between 2012 and 2015.  In the first 2 months, over 2,500 patients visited the clinic.

All HIV+ patients were migrated to OpenMRS as of 2023. Before 2023, ZL HIV clinics utilized a pre-OpenMRS HIV electronic medical records (EMR) system with retrospective data entry leading to data backlogs and lower quality data.

Goals of EMR

  • Identify and register all patients at a facility, regardless of program.  

  • Enable clinicians to enter data directly at the point-of-care, leading to reduced data backlogs, higher quality data and improved access to data for patient care.  This is accomplished through local server installations that eliminate previous barriers due to internet access.

  • Leverage this system to support our clinical programs by providing timely, accurate, complete data on patients enrolled in Primary care, Maternal & Child Health, NCD, HIV, and other strategic clinical areas.  Assist programs with referrals into care, eliminate loss to followup, and evaluate clinical outcomes.  Understand the burden of disease along with expanding universal health coverage (UHC).

System features

The ZL EMR systems will both enable clinicians and impact patients at all points of the care continuum, from recording diagnosis to mapping treatment plans and retaining patients in our care. Through implementing upgrades, our goals are to identify and register all primary care patients, enable clinicians to enter patient data at the point-of-care, and eventually leverage these systems to provide comprehensive and complete data on all patients.  This point-of-care system is used by clinicians and data archivists:  Clinicians capture medical information; Archivists capture patient registration and workflow.  The ZL EMR primary care functionality includes patient registration, check-in, vital signs, and primary care visit information, including history, vaccinations, allergies, physical exam, diagnoses, and treatment plan.

The same OpenMRS software is used at all sites, but with various features toggled on or off, based on the capabilities and workflow at the health facility.  (For example, the Radiology interface is only accessible at Mirebalais where there is a PACS system exchanging data with the EMR).  

Most data is entered into the EMR at point-of-care. Registration of all new patients is completed by data archivists (name, gender, birthdate, address, insurance info, mother’s name, contact information, etc).

New and returning patients are “checked in” by cashiers who collect payment.  The registration and check-in software is exactly the same as used at University Hospital in Mirebalais.  At check-in, the reason for visit is recorded (ie.  HIV, TB, etc)  (Figure 1).

For Thomonde and Lacolline, the system was expanded to collect the entire visit note so that data would be easily available for patient care and decision support.  A clinical dashboard (Figure 2) was created for a simple summary of the most recent information (ie. vitals, diagnoses, visits, allergies).

After a patient visit is started, the clinician selects the appropriate action (vitals, intake or followup; adult or pediatric).  There are many sections in the various forms (Figure 3) -- but there is a summary available for all the data captured in each section. A printout is available from this page that can be added to the patient file. 

New and returning patients are “checked in” by cashiers who collect payment.  The registration and check-in software is exactly the same as used at University Hospital in Mirebalais.  At check-in, the reason for visit is recorded (ie.  HIV, TB, etc)  (Figure 1).

For Thomonde and Lacolline, the system was expanded to collect the entire visit note so that data would be easily available for patient care and decision support.  A clinical dashboard (Figure 2) was created for a simple summary of the most recent information (ie. vitals, diagnoses, visits, allergies).

After a patient visit is started, the clinician selects the appropriate action (vitals, intake or followup; adult or pediatric).  There are many sections in the various forms (Figure 3) -- but there is a summary available for all the data captured in each section. A printout is available from this page that can be added to the patient file. 

Reports

Data is generated from the EMR.  Data can be exported for various patient encounters (ie. registration, vitals, visit note, etc.).  The user customizes data output by date range. Some data is viewed directly by using the web browser and all data can be exported as csv/excel files.

The Team (2016)

There were many collaborators for this project:  ZL Leadership and Information technology; Boston PIH Development, Finance, Medical Informatics; Thomonde and Lacolline leadership, clinicians, and staff.  Gratitude to MAC AIDS for funding.

Zanmi Lasante (ZL) IT

(L-R) Wesly Official, Peterson, Dupuy Rony Charles, Claude, Pierre Charles Mingot, Edwenson Raphael, Jean Baptiste Prince,

Partners In Health (PIH) Boston Medical Informatics

(L-R) Mike Seaton, James Mbabazi, Ellen Ball, Mark Goodrich, Cosmin Ioan, and Dave DeSimone

Technical specifications

The ZL EMR is built with the OpenMRS Reference Application (V2 and V3) along with customized of workflow, htmlforms, and reports. The ZL EMR is available in Haitian Kreyol, French, and English.

With local server hardware, reliable internet is not required.  Internet is utilized when available for data backup and system maintenance. The infrastructure included internet, local area network, multiple power sources (grid, generator, solar, and battery backups), A/C, and rack server.  The server are running the latest version of Ubuntu.