Journal article

Three waves of data use among health workers: The experience of the Better Immunization Data Initiative in Tanzania and Zambia

The governments of Tanzania and Zambia identified key data-related challenges affecting immunization service delivery including identifying children due for vaccines, time-consuming data entry processes, and inadequate resources. To address these challenges, since 2014, the countries have partnered with PATH’s Better Immunization Data (BID) Initiative to design and deploy a suite of data quality and use interventions. Two key aspects of the interventions were an electronic immunization registry and tools and practices to strengthen a culture of data use. As both countries deployed the interventions, three distinct changes in data use emerged organically. This article provides a detailed summary of these three phases or waves, based mostly on qualitative data or observation: (1) strengthening data collection using new data collection tools and processes and increasing efficiency of health workers; (2) improving data quality regarding accuracy and completeness; and (3) increasing use of data to take action to strengthen their work and for programmatic decision making. These waves clearly demonstrated the growing ability of health workers to move from data collectors to data analyzers who began to focus on the data quality and then the value of using the data in their day-to-day activities.

Authors

Languages

  • English

Publication year

2019

Publisher

PATH, BID Initiative, Global Health: Science and Practice

Journal

Global Health: Science and Practice 2019

Volume

3

Type

Journal article

Categories

  • Data

Countries

  • United Republic Of Tanzania
  • Zambia

Organisations

  • PATH

Tags

  • BID
  • Data quality
  • Data reporting
  • Electronic health records
  • Immunization information systems
  • Organization and administration
  • Registries

WHO Regions

  • African Region

Topic references

BID_knowledge_management

TitleAuthorYearTypeLanguage
Accelerating Harmonization in Digital HealthAmanda P. BenDor, Carolyn Moore, Laurie Werner, Mike Bailey, Nighat Khan2017Journal articleEnglish
BID Initiative Briefs: Recommendations and Lessons Learned | Change ManagementBID Initiative2017ReportEnglish
BID Initiative Briefs: Recommendations and Lessons Learned | Data UseBID Initiative2017ReportEnglish
BID Initiative Briefs: Recommendations and Lessons Learned | Electronic Immunization RegistriesBID Initiative2017ReportEnglish
BID Initiative Briefs: Recommendations and Lessons Learned | IntroductionBID Initiative2017ReportEnglish
BID Initiative Briefs: Recommendations and Lessons Learned | Peer LearningBID Initiative2017ReportEnglish
BID Initiative Briefs: Recommendations and Lessons Learned | Rollout StrategyBID Initiative2017ReportEnglish
BID Initiative Briefs: Recommendations and Lessons Learned | Software Development CycleBID Initiative2017ReportEnglish
BID Initiative Briefs: Recommendations and Lessons Learned | SustainabilityBID Initiative2017ReportEnglish
BLN Webinar | Immunization Data: Evidence for Action (IDEA) ReviewBID Initiative2020TrainingEnglish
Defining and Building a Data Use CultureBID Initiative2017GuidanceEnglish
Electronic immunization registries in Tanzania and Zambia: Shaping a minimum viable product for scaled solutionsBID Initiative, Brian Taliesin, Dawn Seymour, Dykki Settle, Francis Dien Mwansa, Henry Mwanyika, Laurie Werner, Mandy Dube, Ngwegwe BululaJournal articleEnglish
From fragile to resilient health systems: A journey to self-relianceBID Initiative2019ReportEnglish
Measurement, sustainability, and scale of data quality and data use interventionsBID Initiative2017PresentationEnglish
MMS Bulletin #148: The challenges of implementing a data use cultureBID Initiative2018Journal articleEnglish
Mobile network operator partnerships in action for health: A Vietnam case study on mobile network operator and ministry of health engagement for electronic immunization registry applicationBID Initiative, PATH, Vietnam Ministry of Health, General Department of Preventive Medicine, Vietnam National Expanded Program on Immunization (NEPI), ViettelReportEnglish
Redefining vaccination coverage and timeliness measures using electronic immunization registry data in low- and middle-income countriesBID InitiativeJournal articleEnglish
The challenges of implementing a data use cultureBID Initiative2018Journal articleEnglish
The costs of developing, deploying and maintaining electronic immunisation registries in Tanzania and ZambiaBID Initiative2019Journal articleEnglish
The impact of an integrated electronic immunization registry and logistics management information system (EIR-eLMIS) on vaccine availability in three regions in Tanzania: A pre-post and time-series analysisBID Initiative2019Journal articleEnglish
Three waves of data use among health workers: The experience of the Better Immunization Data Initiative in Tanzania and ZambiaBID Initiative2019Journal articleEnglish

Added by: BID Initiative

Added on: 2020-02-13 09:21:27

Hits: 1453