2013
DOI: 10.18489/sacj.v50i1.176
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A Review of Interoperability Standards in E-health and Imperatives for their Adoption in Africa

Abstract: The ability of healthcare information systems to share and exchange information (interoperate) is essential to facilitate the quality and effectiveness of healthcare services. Although standardization is considered key to addressing the fragmentation currently challenging the healthcare environment, e-health standardization can be difficult for many reasons, one of which is making sense of the e-health interoperability standards landscape. Specifically aimed at the African health informatics community,… Show more

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Cited by 37 publications
(26 citation statements)
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“…Organizational, legal, ethical, conceptual and technological issues are crucial in allowing mHealth services to become widespread throughout the emerging area and particularly with some imperatives for their adoption in Africa [40].…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Organizational, legal, ethical, conceptual and technological issues are crucial in allowing mHealth services to become widespread throughout the emerging area and particularly with some imperatives for their adoption in Africa [40].…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Examples of these include CALIBER (Morley et al, 2014), HealthID 1 , epSOS (Fonseca et al, 2015), openEHR 2 , HEOR (Asaria et al, 2016), semantichealthnet (Martinez-Costa et al, 2014). Many of the EHR approaches focussed on the interoperability of EHR (Adebesin et al, 2013;Adenuga et al, 2015;Fonseca et al, 2015;Martinez-Costa et al, 2014), and the use of EHR for the purpose of informed decision making on patient's treatment (Asaria et al, 2016;Lobo et al, 2017;Morley et al, 2014;Zhao and Weng, 2011).…”
Section: Background and Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…One of the reasons for this is that e-health system implementations are hardly ever coordinated at national level, but driven by donor-funded vertical programs (e.g., HIV/AIDS monitoring and evaluation). These implementations are almost always pilot projects inside one health facility with no evidence of scaling up (Adebesin et al, 2013).…”
Section: Background To African Contextmentioning
confidence: 99%