Strengthening health systems through informatics capacity development among doctors in low-resource contexts: the Sri Lankan experience

WHO South East Asia J Public Health. 2019 Sep;8(2):87-94. doi: 10.4103/2224-3151.264852.

Abstract

In the process of strengthening health systems, a lack of health-informatics capacity within low- and middle-income country settings is a considerable challenge. Many capacity-development initiatives on health informatics exist, most of which focus on the adoption of eHealth tools by front-line health-care workers. By contrast, there are only a few programmes that focus on empowering medical doctors in low- and middle-income countries to become champions of digital health innovation and adoption. Sri Lanka has a dynamic eHealth ecosystem, resulting largely from the country’s community of medical doctors who are also health informaticians. They are the result of a decade-long programme centred on a Master of Science degree course in biomedical informatics, which has trained over 150 medical doctors to date, and has now been extended to a specialist training programme. This paper evaluates this unique capacity-development effort from the perspective of strengthening health systems and how those in other low- and middle-income country contexts may learn from the Sri Lankan experience when implementing capacity-development programmes in health informatics.

Keywords: capacity development; eHealth ecosystem; health informatics; health information systems.

MeSH terms

  • Capacity Building*
  • Education, Medical, Graduate*
  • Government Programs
  • Health Resources*
  • Humans
  • Medical Informatics / education*
  • Organizational Culture
  • Physicians*
  • Sri Lanka
  • Telemedicine*