Anticipating Adoption: Developing a National Digital Health Registry in a Centralized Healthcare System Design, Adoption, and Governance in the Early-Phase Development of a National Cleft Lip and Palate Registry in Rwanda
Hämtar...
Publicerad
Författare
Typ
Examensarbete för masterexamen
Master's Thesis
Master's Thesis
Modellbyggare
Tidskriftstitel
ISSN
Volymtitel
Utgivare
Sammanfattning
Across low- and middle-income countries, digital health registries are increasingly
introduced to strengthen health information systems and support coordinated care,
yet their early-phase development remains understudied, particularly in centralized
healthcare contexts. This study examines how a national digital health registry is
developed and established during its early phase, using the design and prototyping
of a cleft lip and palate registry in Rwanda as an empirical case. Data was collected
through a qualitative single case study combining semi-structured and exploratory
interviews with iterative prototype feedback sessions involving clinicians, registry
developers, NGO actors, and policymakers. The findings show that some adoption
barriers, including documentation workload and infrastructure constraints, can be
identified and addressed through design choices before deployment, a process the
study describes through the concept of anticipatory adoption, while others, such as
double entry, can be anticipated during this phase but not resolved through design
alone. The design process also revealed trade-offs between dataset scope and data
quality, standardization and local fit, and top-down implementation versus bottomup
clinical involvement. For long-term sustainability, early institutional anchoring
within national structures is identified as essential, as formal recognition at the national
level shifts registry use from voluntary to required. Sustained use however
depends on continuous engagement through training, feedback and incentives, and
explicit planning for long-term ownership must be addressed during development
rather than treated as a post-project concern. Together, the findings suggest that
the early-phase development of sustainable digital health registries in centralized
contexts requires three complementary conditions: bottom-up clinical involvement
in design, top-down institutional anchoring in implementation, and continuous engagement
work at all levels.
Beskrivning
Ämne/nyckelord
Digital health registry, cleft lip and palate, Rwanda, centralized governance, low-resource settings,, health information systems, participatory design, technology adoption, institutional anchoring,, anticipatory adoption
