FAIR Equivalency with Regulatory Framework for Digital Health in Uganda

Author:

Basajja Mariam1,Van Reisen Mirjam123,Oladipo Francisca4

Affiliation:

1. Leiden University, Leiden, 1011NC, Amsterdam, the Netherlands

2. Leiden University Medical Centre (LUMC), Leiden University, 1310 Leiden, the Netherlands

3. Tilburg University, P.O. Box 90153 5000, the Netherlands

4. Federal University, 260101 Lokoja, Nigeria

Abstract

Abstract This study explores the possibility of opening a policy window for the adoption of the FAIR Guidelines— that data be Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, and Reusable (FAIR)—in Uganda's eHealth sector. Although the FAIR Guidelines were not mentioned in any of the policy documents relevant to Uganda's eHealth sector, the study found that 83% of the documents mentioned FAIR Equivalent efforts, such as the adoption of the National Identification Number (NIN) as a unique identifier in Uganda's national Electronic Health Management Information System (eHMIS) (findability), the planned/ongoing integration of various information systems (interoperability), and the alignment of various projects with international best practices/standards (reusability). A FAIR Equivalency Score (FE-Score), devised in this study as an aggregate score of the mention of the equivalent of FAIR facets in the policy documents, showed that the documents at the core of Uganda's digital health/eHealth policy have the highest score of all the documents analysed, indicating that there is a degree of alignment between Uganda's National eHealth Vision and the FAIR Guidelines. Therefore, it can be concluded that favourable conditions exist for the adoption and implementation of the FAIR Guidelines in Uganda's eHealth sector. Hence, it is recommended that the FAIR community adopt a capacity building strategy through organisations with a worldwide mandate, such as the World Health Organization, to promote the adoption of the FAIR Guidelines as part of international best practices.

Publisher

MIT Press

Subject

Artificial Intelligence,Library and Information Sciences,Computer Science Applications,Information Systems

Reference34 articles.

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