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MISQ Archivist
Developing Health Information Systems in
Developing Countries: The Flexible Standards Strategy
Jørn Braa, Ole Hanseth, Arthur
Heywood, Woinshet Mohammed, and Vincent Shaw
Abstract
The development of
appropriate integrated and scalable information systems in the
health sector in developing countries has been difficult to achieve,
and is likely to remain elusive in the face of continued fragmented
funding of health programmes, particularly related to the HIV/AIDS
epidemic. In this article, we propose a strategy for developing
information infrastructures in general and in particular for the
health care sector in developing countries. We use complexity
science to explain the challenges that need to be addressed, in
particular the needs for standards that can adapt to a changing
health care environment, and propose the concept of flexible
standards as a key element in a sustainable infrastructure
development strategy. Drawing on case material from a number of
developing countries, a case is built around the use of flexible
standards as attractors, arguing that if they are well defined and
simple, they will be able to adapt to the frequent changes that are
experienced in the complex health environment. A number of paradoxes
are highlighted as useful strategies – integrated independence being
one that encourages experimentation and heterogeneity to develop and
share innovative solutions, while still conforming to simple
standards. The article provides theoretical concepts to support
standardization processes in complex systems, and to suggest an
approach to implement health standards in developing country
settings that is sensitive to the local context, allows change to
occur through small steps, and provides a mechanism for scaling
information systems.
Keywords: Health information systems, standards,
complexity science, developing countries |