International Journal for Quality in Health Care Advance Access originally published online on October 13, 2006
International Journal for Quality in Health Care 2006 18(6):437-445; doi:10.1093/intqhc/mzl053
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Can computers improve patient care by primary health care workers in India?
1 Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Department of International Health, 2 Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Center for Innovation in Quality Patient Care, Baltimore, MD, USA, and 3 Independent Consultant, Bangalore, Karnataka, India
Objective. The objective was to test whether a decision support technology for non-physicians can increase health care utilization and quality.
Design. Before and after measurements were taken from a systematic random sample of patients and staff at randomly assigned intervention and control facilities.
Setting. The study took place at primary health facilities in rural Tamil Nadu, India
Participants. One thousand two hundred and eighty-six patients and 82 staff were interviewed.
Intervention. A computer-assisted decision support technology was introduced to assist with patient screening.
Main outcome measures. Outcome measures included new patient visits per month, a Global Patient Assessment of Care Index, and health worker attitude variables.
Results. There was a difference of difference of 430 new patient visits per month at the intervention sites (P = 0.005), an increase from baseline of 18% at intervention sites compared with a decline of 5% at control sites. The intervention was associated with significant improvements in a Global Patient Assessment of Care Index (mean difference of difference 7.9, P < 0.001). The largest gains were made in patient communication, technical quality, and general satisfaction with care. The attitudes of public health workers toward the new technology and their jobs did not change.
Conclusions. Decision support technologies have considerable potential to improve coverage and quality of health care for the poor and where there is no doctor, but the unreceptive attitude of public health workers would need to be overcome. Application of these technologies should take advantage of their popularity with patients and the opportunity to work through the private sector.
Keywords: computers, decision support technology, evaluation, health workers, patient satisfaction, poverty, technology, utilization
Address reprint requests to David H. Peters, Room E8132 Department of International Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, 615 N. Wolfe St, Baltimore, MD 21205. E-mail: dpeters{at}jhsph.edu
Accepted for publication September 14, 2006.