Integrating e-health in the national health policy
yielded from the beginning enthusiasm from the
donor community and in the course of the past
decade, a growing number of ICT tools have found
their way to the Burundian health sector. But most of
these tools have been introduced for supporting
projects lead by NGOs and foreign technical and
financial partners whereas hardware and software
solutions almost systematically served well the donor
objectives, but inter-project coordination and
interfacing remained exceptional. Several successful
e-health tools remained hidden in silo-projects and
only produced a fraction of their potential benefits.
Without corrective action, the Burundian health
sector threatens to evolve towards a cacophony of
divergent non-integrated health informatics
implementations. In order to cope with this threat, the
MoH initiated in 2014, with financial backup of the
Belgian Technical Cooperation, the development of a
national e-health enterprise architecture based on The
Open Group Architecture Framework (TOGAF). In a
first step, an initial analysis of human resources,
business processes, hardware, software,
communication and networking infrastructure related
to health information management, had to be
established. This study describes the objectives,
methods and findings of this analysis.
2 MATERIALS AND METHODS
The main objective of the study was to provide a
reliable estimation of the existing human and material
resources and issues related to health information
management in Burundi. The research hypothesis was
that an industrial framework like TOGAF could be
used for this, even in the challenging environment of
one of the poorest countries in the world. If
successful, the study results were to become the first
step in a complete e-health enterprise architecture
development cycle according to the TOGAF
methodology, and therefore needed to provide data
for the development of 4 essential sub-architectures:
Business architecture: what are the MoH
business needs in terms of health information
management?
Application architecture: which health
information management applications have
already been implemented in the field and to
what extent do they address the business needs?
Data architecture: what data is needed and
collected today by the MoH and what is the
quality of it?
Technology architecture: what are the
necessary technologies (software, hardware, and
networking) and which ones are used today in
the health domain in Burundi?
A first part of the study consisted of a detailed
analysis of regulatory documents and strategic plans
related to the Burundian health system.
In a second part, field visits and semi-structured
interviews were organized with a sample of relevant
structures of the MoH. A standardized study-specific
interview guide was developed and systematically
used by the interviewers.
3 RESULTS
3.1 Mission analysis and field visits
The study of regulatory documents and strategic plans
took place in October and November 2014. After that,
a series of field visits and interviews have been
organized with 39 relevant MoH and -related
structures in the Bujumbura province (the permanent
secretary and all MoH directorates, major health
programs, donor agencies, NGOs, public and private
health facilities and educational institutions). In the
period from November to December 2014, the e-
health architecture development team also visited 5
other provinces (Muramvya, Gitega, Ruyigi, Kirundo
and Ngozi), covering 5 provincial health offices, 5
health district administrations and 12 hospitals. In
total, management staff of more than 15% of the MoH
structures have been questioned about the mission,
the mandate and the vision of their organization, their
objectives and the way their work is organized. After
that, a detailed analysis was made of health
information management related human resources,
ICT solutions and non-ICT (paper based) instruments
at their disposal and procedures used for exchanging
health information with other (MoH or non-MoH)
organizations. Finally, an analysis was performed of
health information management problems, expected
benefits and potential threats of health ICT for each
component of the MoH.
3.2 Hardware
The study showed that computer hardware has most
often been supplied to the MoH by donor-driven
intervention programs. There is no organization-wide
management of computer equipment and distribution
of hardware over the different MoH directorates,
provincial- or district administrations and hospitals is
Using Togaf for Building a National Implementation Strategy for E-Health Services and Technologies in Burundi