Smartphone App Supports EHR Efforts in Low-Income Countries

To assist health care in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), Martin Were, MD, MS, associate professor of Biomedical Informatics at Vanderbilt University Medical Center and a member of the Vanderbilt Institute for Global Health, devised a smartphone application called mUzimaUzima is Swahili for life and mUzima’s slogan is “mobile for life.”

In a recent paper in the Journal of Medical Internet Research, Were and colleagues recount the mobile application’s growth and continuing geographic spread. By 2017, some clinics in Kenya, where Were is from, had begun using mUzima for chronic disease management; that year, the application received a boost when the Kenyan Ministry of Health, with assistance from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, adopted mUzima to support HIV testing services across the country. The authors report that the application has since been implemented nationally in Kenya, is widely used in Rwanda, and is gaining scale in Uganda and Mozambique. They also note that, as it has gained in popularity, mUzima has acquired an active community of developers and adopters from around the world.

The application is a work horse, allowing providers who work remotely to access historical patient data, collect new data, view media, leverage decision support, conduct store-and-forward teleconsultations and geolocate clients. As detailed in the report, use cases stretch from COVID-19 and cancer to HIV and other chronic diseases.

“We believe mUzima’s development and spread points the way forward for health IT in resource-limited settings,” Were said. “Over reliance on standalone system installations at health care facilities in these countries threatens to widen the digital divide, leaving behind areas with inadequate electrical and network infrastructure. Our application’s ability to work both online and offline allows for its use in settings with very limited infrastructure. mUzima’s continued growth shows that open-source mobile information technology has a vital role to play in serving health care needs in these countries.”

Read more in the VUMC Reporter