4.6 Editorial Material

Implementing a new tuberculosis surveillance system in Zhejiang, Jilin and Ningxia: improvements, challenges and implications for China's National Health Information System

Journal

INFECTIOUS DISEASES OF POVERTY
Volume 10, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s40249-021-00811-w

Keywords

Disease surveillance system; Tuberculosis; Implementation science

Funding

  1. Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation [OPP1149395]
  2. Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation [OPP1149395] Funding Source: Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation

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The new TB surveillance system implemented in China has shown successful data exchange and improved data completeness, but faces challenges in licensing and infrastructure diversity. This pilot project has accumulated experiences for the roll-out of the National Health Information System (NHIS) and provided insights on technical solutions and training approaches for scaling up the system to cater better to the needs of healthcare workers.
Background: China is still faced with the public health challenge of tuberculosis (TB), and a robust surveillance system is critical for developing evidence-based TB control policies. The Tuberculosis Information Management System (TBIMS), an independent system launched in 2005, has encountered several challenges in meeting the current needs of TB control. The Chinese government also planned to establish the National Health Information System (NHIS) aggregating data in different areas. The China National Health Commission-Gates TB Project Phase III launched a new TB surveillance system to address these challenges and also as a pilot for the countrywide implementation of the NHIS. This commentary highlights the improvements and challenges in implementing the new TB system and also discusses the implications for the roll-out of the NHIS. Main text: The new TB surveillance system piloted in each prefecture of the project provinces was designed based on the local information system under the unified principle of organizing patient information under a unique ID and realizing the function of data exchange. Upon mid-2019, the data exchange successful rate reached almost 100%, and the system showed good performance in data completeness. Major improvements of the new system included achieving automatic data extraction instead of manual entry, assisting clinical service provision, and the augmented statistical functions. The major challenges in the implementation and scale-up of the new system were the licensing issue and the diversities of infrastructures that hinder the promotion of the new system at a low cost. This pilot also accumulated experiences for the roll-out of the NHIS regarding the technical solutions of reforming current information systems as well as effective training approaches for the developers and users of the new system. Conclusions: The successful implementation of the new TB surveillance system in the three TB designated medical institutions demonstrated how the diverse infrastructures of the information system could be reformed to achieve the functions of automatic data extraction and data exchange and better cater to the needs of healthcare workers. This pilot also accumulated rich experiences and lessons learnt for developing technical solutions and personnel training for the scale-up of the NHIS.

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