Digital Square Investments in Global Goods: Difference between revisions

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===Proposal Timelines===
===Proposal Timelines===
{|
{|
|+Step  |+Action |+Approximate Timeline
|+Step  ||+Action ||+Approximate Timeline
|- Step 1 | Digital Square issues call for proposals and submitters send concept notes to Digital Square to post on public-facing platform. | 3-4 weeks
|- Step 1 | Digital Square issues call for proposals and submitters send concept notes to Digital Square to post on public-facing platform. | 3-4 weeks
|- Step 2 | Proposal cocreation: Public, PRC, and other submitters provide feedback, comments, suggestions, and identify potential areas for collaboration. | 4 weeks
|- Step 2 | Proposal cocreation: Public, PRC, and other submitters provide feedback, comments, suggestions, and identify potential areas for collaboration. | 4 weeks

Revision as of 14:34, 2 November 2017

Calls for Proposals

Digital Square routinely releases calls for proposals to invest in Digital Health Global Goods.

Proposal Timelines

Step +Action +Approximate Timeline

Past Calls for Proposals

Current Investments

Bahmni

In collaboration with DIAL, Digital Square is supporting the evolution the Bahmni governance by creating a new Bahmni Coalition and giving it full ownership over the Bahmni product and initiative, transforming Bahmni from being a ThoughtWorks-owned-and-operated project to a collaborative open-source one hosted through OpenMRS Inc. To speed up and smooth this transition, Digital Square and Dial are supporting the following activities:

  • Collaborative development work on community-prioritized product evolution
  • Set up processes and tooling for FOSS development
  • Write a Development Team Reference Manual
  • Develop Standard Processes for Subcontracting
  • Transition Bahmni IP from ThoughtWorks to the coalition

eIDSR

Jembi Health Systems, Vecna Cares, Dimagi and Fio are developing integrated disease surveillance solution that leverages the value of each of their technological innovations and our community of practice in interoperability. At the core, the solution would see the enabling of CommCare and Fionet to leverage published health standards (OpenHIE, HL7 FHIR) to communicate with a Health Information Exchange through the OpenHIM and submit and query patient level data. The system would also show the ability to trigger alerts based on submitted data and create the opportunity to have patient level data feed a national data warehouse (such as DHIS2) and leverage mHero for communication. This system would ease the burden on community health workers, clinicians, laboratory technicians, and health center admin in under-resourced areas through a more seamless connection between and visibility of data collection points, diagnostics, and workflow support. Government bodies and implementing partners would have better visibility into the data collection and management through this cohesive integrated approach to infectious disease data management. Most importantly, this sustainable solution would provide beneficiaries in critical areas a faster, more reliable connection to critical care and diagnostics for the disease burden pertinent to their district, region, or country.

Global Open Facility Registry (GOFR)

A consortium comprising eHealth Africa, IntraHealth, JSI and RTI are working on the development of curation tools for managing multiple list of health facilities in order to support ministries of health efforts to develop and maintain a Master Facility List and link with existing public sources of health facility data. Country specific support for implementation of the GOFR tools is being provided to Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone.

  • iHRIS Foundation The iHRIS Foundation , with IntraHealth as secretariat, will focus the development of features and functions to respond to requests from the iHRIS community, including ministries of health and health professional associations; as well as prepare the platform for broader use in new domains. Freed from the strict structure of projects and dependency on piecemeal funding, the iHRIS community, led by the Foundation, will be able to address longstanding issues that affect all users and offer support for new architectures to optimize the functionality and power of iHRIS. New tools, documentation, and capabilities for iHRIS will make it easier to use, more powerful, and more interoperable with the various health information ecosystems utilized by the global community. Improved and more readily available training and learning materials will increase the number of users and their capacity for making full use of the software. These improvements to iHRIS will provide the men and women who make decisions regarding human resources in the health sector with the data they need to better understand how their health systems are working, where their needs are greatest, and how to best meet those needs.

Open Data Kit 2 (ODK2)

Global development organizations, and country-based programs increasingly rely on mobile data collection and management tools for a wide range of activities relating to the measurement, evaluation, and delivery of health programs. The collection and use of accurate and timely data is essential to organizations, their intended beneficiaries, and donors. https://opendatakit.org/use/2_0_tools/ ODK 2.0], from University of Washington, builds on the experience of ODK 1.0. ODK 2.0 has been under development for a number of years and needs to be transitioned to a multi-stakeholder open source community as part of support for more complex mobile data collection scenarios:

  • Data management needs are increasing as mobile data collection moves away from collecting one-time survey data to collecting longitudinal data.
  • As tools extend to more sophisticated applications, a deployment architect must be able to perform the necessary customizations to locality and over time. ·
  • With a growing ecosystem of global good software tools, it is important to have seamless configuration, interoperability and linkages between tools
    • Network infrastructure and connectivity continue to pose significant challenges to mobile data collection, so it is essential that tools function in environments with intermittent mobile connectivity.

OpenLMIS

A consortium comprising VillageReach, JSI and Ona will develop the features identified during the recent gap analysis work. The consortium seeks to provide the following outcomes:

  • Provide feature parity between TZM eLMIS and OpenLMISv3 to the greatest degree possible within funding limits, thereby enabling a cost-effective and efficient path for existing eLMIS countries to upgrade to v3.x
  • Add compelling new features and enhancements to existing and new modules using the improved architecture for new country adoption
  • Grow the OpenLMIS community by developing Africa-based resources that can eventually serve as software development and implementation partners, regional support centers and code schools.
  • Support the OpenLMIS community by continuing to support the Core team providing fundamental support to the community and facilitate the governance, product and technical committees.

Past Investments

OpenLMIS

In the spring of 2017, Digital Square, in collaboration with Village Reach, supported JSI to conduct a gap analysis between the functionality present in eLMIS and that in OpenLMIS 3.x to ensure that countries wishing to adopt OpenLMIS 3.x have an upgrade path. Identified functional gaps were prioritized based on country needs.