Thang,

There are many ways to hide the complexity of OpenMRS but continue to use the 
application and database as the back end. In MVP, we are using OpenMRS in all 
10 African countries, with different applications for different users at the 
front end. Our Community Health Workers use ChildCount+ (RapidSMS) and this 
feeds into OpenMRS. Our clinics use OpenMRS primarily retrospectively, although 
we are looking at prospective entry for immunizations and children in some 
places. We also use ODK and xforms to capture Verbal Autopsy data and this all 
goes into OpenMRS.

Happy to discuss and will definitely be in Kigali.

Andy
 
-------------------- 
Andrew S. Kanter, MD MPH 


- Director of Health Information Systems/Medical Informatics
Millennium Villages Project, Earth Institute, Columbia University
- Asst. Prof. of Clinical Biomedical Informatics and Clinical Epidemiology
Columbia University


Email: [email protected] 
Mobile: +1 (646) 469-2421
Office: +1 (212) 305-4842
Skype: akanter-ippnw
Yahoo: andy_kanter


>________________________________
>From: Thang Dao <[email protected]>
>To: [email protected]
>Sent: Tuesday, August 23, 2011 3:53 AM
>Subject: [OPENMRS-IMPLEMENTERS] Médecins sans frontières  (aka Doctors without 
>borders) interest in OpenMRS
>
>Dear Implementers,
>
>We at Médecins sans frontières are interested in using OpenMRS data model
>to underlie our new generation of medical data collection tools.
>
>More and more of our operations are dealing with chronic diseases and/or
>states of malnutrition.
>
>To support following up our patients, we are thinking of introducing a
>medical record system in a pervasive way, yet masking out the complexity.
>
>Thus our strategy is to opt for OpenMRS data model, yet introducing only
>part of what is needed only, because our field users are not computer
>literate.
>
>For instance, for our "Street violence" project in Honduras, we collect
>data about young children living on the streets (name, sex), the type of
>abuse they were victims of (sexual agression, ...), when it occurred (1
>hour, 6 hours ago...) and the treatment we provided (basic care, bandage,
>condoms distribution, ...).
>
>We meet the children again and then collect more data on the encounter.
>
>Since strolling the streets of Tegucigalpa with a laptop is the surest way
>of being mugged, we tally the children with a paper form and a digital pen.
>We go back to the point of care, download data into a CSV file, upload the
>file in a local data repository which we would like to build according to
>OpenMRS data model. We use QlikView to provide immediate synthesis /
>analysis of data to local social workers.
>
>So the question are:
>
>   Is this a viable option? Keeping the full fledged data structure in the
>   database engine, yet feeding it only with data related to operation at
>   hand?
>   If yes, who has experience rolling out OpenMRS that way?
>   If your anser is Yes to question 2, are you going to Kigali? We would
>   love to go, but our budget is tight so we need a compelling reason.
>
>
>Cordialement / Best regards / Freundliche Grüsse
>
>Thang Dao
>Directeur Systèmes d'Information - Médecins sans Frontières (Suisse)
>Information Systems Director - Doctors without Borders (Switzerland)
>Informationssystem Leiter - Aertze ohne Grenzen (Schweiz)
>Rue de Lausanne, 78
>1211 Genève 21
>
>+41 (0)22 849 8996
>_________________________________________
>
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>

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