MOSORIOT Medical Record System (MMRS)
MOSORIOT Medical Record System (MMRS), designed by a collaborative project between Indiana University and the Moi University Faculty of Health Sciences, is an electronic medical record system supporting a primary care health center in rural Kenya. It is located within Mosoriot Health Center, Kenya. The MMRS is to improve the quality of health data collection and patient care. The implementation phase I of MUFHS particularly focused on the decisions and trade-offs that must be made when introducing this technology into an established health care system in a developing country. [1]
From the beginning of the system (initiated in February 2001), 10,000 visit records were entered for 6,190 patients in six months. [2] The MMRS has had far-reaching influences in the local health care system [3]:
- Routine reports for some infectious diseases(required by the Ministry of Health).
- Trace epidemic patterns and find disease cluster.
- Save time for health care providers.
- The MRHC pharmacist has used the MMRS reports to manage drug inventories.
- Clinicians are able to document the amount of free care (required by the Ministry of Health).
References
- 1. Hannan TJ, Rotich JK, Odero WW, et al. The Mosoriot medical record system: design and initial implementation of an outpatient electronic record system in rural Kenya. Int J Med Inform. 2000 Oct;60(1):21-8.
- 2. Rotich JK, Hannan TJ, Smith FE, et al. Installing and implementing a computer-based patient record system in sub-Saharan Africa: the Mosoriot Medical Record System. J Am Med Inform Assoc. 2003 Jul-Aug;10(4):295-303.
- 3. Impact Case Studies and Knowledge Transfer Case Studies: Health Information Technology (Health IT), 2004. September 2009. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Rockville, MD. http://www.ahrq.gov/about/casestudies/healthit/hit2004.htm