16
Disease Reporting Hotline Launches to Stop Outbreaks in Cambodia By Tharum Bun

Disease Reporting Hotline Launches to Stop Outbreaks in Cambodia

  • Upload
    instedd

  • View
    376

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Disease Reporting Hotline Launches to Stop Outbreaks in Cambodia

By Tharum Bun

Cambodia is in a ‘hot zone region’, susceptible to deadly disease spread. Timely reports from Health Centers across the country are critical to stopping outbreaks.

To improve disease reporting in

Cambodia, the iLab Southeast Asia, in

partnership with Cambodian CDC and

Skoll Global Threats Fund, launched a

free to the public disease hotline built

with InSTEDD’s interactive voice

response tool Verboice. By calling 115

anyone with a phone and mobile

network can report disease

information by voice and keypad entry.

The hotline was officially launched with all partners in January 2016 in Phnom Penh, Cambodia.

Dr. Ly Sovann of Ministry of Health is in charge of the hotline. “Reporting through hotline 115 will especially benefit the efforts of health workers, increasing their

reliability and productivity. On-time reporting means disease outbreak prevention”

As a principle of the iLab SEA human centered-design approach, the team traveled to visit Kratie, a community nearly a 6-hour drive from Phnom Penh, to

meet with health workers to determine what that the 115 hotline could assist with.

On the site visit we met Ms. Vanny, a

midwife and counselor who has worked

at Orrusey health center in the Kratie

Province since 1991.

When we asked her about disease reporting, she shared with us time-intensive, detailed paperwork. Time she would prefer to spend with her many patients.

Vanny knows that she needs to send disease information as quickly as possible, but is limited by the many other responsibilities that she has.

The disease reporting must be done, no matter how overwhelming, time consuming, or stressful it is to complete.

Vanny said that if she could replace her paperwork with a call to the hotline then it could enable her to create more time for her many duties.

“Stopping disease spread saves people’s lives. It stops people from getting into a ‘poverty trap’, because as people get infected, they have to spend a lot of money

on treatment that they cannot afford.”

With the hotline operating and the need for health workers clear, Ms. Vanny and others are receiving training on how to use 115 for disease reporting.

Ten ‘115 trainings’ have been delivered and more are scheduled. The team behind 115 are now working to bring its benefits to health centers across Cambodia.

115 hotline is made possible by the

Cambodian CDC and Skoll Global Threats Fund.

This photo essay was produced with support

from the Rockefeller Foundation.

To learn more about The iLab SEA team approach to innovation for improved health

in the region, please visit:

www.ilabsoutheastasia.org

/instedd /instedd /instedd