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Project Motivation
It is estimated
that in the next 10 years, 50 million people will die from HIV/AIDS
related illness. The number of people who will need care is much
larger than this. In Sub-Saharan Africa, agencies are trying to
cope with this increasing demand for health care through distributed
home-based care models. In order to provide the best care and distribute
resources such as food and medication most effectively, these organizations
have to be able to access and act on full information about the
patients in their programs. But as these programs continue to grow,
the outdated paper-based methods of data tracking are inadequate.
A home-based care project may have 20,000 patients and not even
know simple metrics, such as how many men, women, and children they
are serving, or how many patients are suffering from tuberculosis.
This is incredibly important from a care-giving perspective, and
the information is also very valuable for impact assessment and
fundraising to support the continuing programs.
Technical Description
The Catholic
Archdiocese of Lusaka, Zambia runs 60 Community Home-Based Care
(CHBC) programs, with over 20,000 patients receiving care. They
have a full paper-based information gathering system, and they have
begun to digitize their data in excel, which is inadequate for the
size and scope of their needs. Design and implement a data entry
and analysis system to handle the data generated by this project.
A suggested form would be an SQL database with a web-based (JSP)
front-end for data entry and record analysis.
Community
The main community
partner for this project is the Community Home-Based Care program
run by the Catholic Archdiocese, and is staffed by hundreds of volunteers
who spend their time taking care of their sick neighbors. The CHBC
program is the largest in Lusaka, and they tend to set the example
for the rest of the programs. We have close and enthusiastic cooperation
from the director the program. Lusaka is a city of 2 million people,
and it is estimated that in certain age-groups, the HIV infection
rate is as high as 49% (based on anonymous blood-testing of prenatal
care patients). There are resources being mobilized for care and
prevention, and this project will make a big impact on those efforts.
We are also working with a US based non-profit called the Power
of Love Foundation to implement broader IT solutions for community
based health care in Zambia.
Project Status
There is a large
team of MIT students working on a large-scale implementation of
a generalized patient-tracking system. This project fills an immediate
need and will contribute to this larger project as well. The CHBC
has some of their data in electronic form (in excel) and they have
computing resources available. This particular component is in the
planning and specification stage.
Contact
Will DelHagen
<willd@mit.edu>
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