OpenMRS - Using Information Technology to Unleash the Transformational Power of Communities. Presented by Paul Biondich and Burke Mamlin and the 10th Biennial Regenstrief
5. OpenMRS grew out of a partnership between Indiana University School of Medicine and Moi University in Eldoret, Kenya. They had a 10-year collaboration through the 1990s…
6. … then lots of people started dying from HIV/AIDS.
7. 40,000,000 95% 5% Developed World Developing World HIV/AIDS Burden Developing countries have most of the burden of HIV/AIDS.
17. But they needed an enterprise electronic medical record (EMR) and two guys building an EMR with 10% of their time…well, it was a herculean task.
18. We looked to see if others had solved the problem. There were silos of effort, mostly with MS Access-based systems built to meet immediate needs.
19. Then we met Partners In Health. They were installing their system in Rwanda and wanted to rebuild it. A perfect match for us. The impossible became possible.
40. Google Summer of Code made us aware of how communities can be sustained through internet technologies. We worked hard on our website.
41. We use technology like RSS to make conversations and changes more transparent and to enhance communication & scalability
42. Getting to Maybe: How the World is Changed Then Tom Inui pointed out this book to us and we learned that OpenMRS is an example of a “social transformation.” We hadn’t realized there was a theoretical framework for what we were doing.
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45. Freely Available Not only do we serve free food, but we strive to take every ingredient and every recipe made within the kitchen and make it freely available to everyone. Also know as “open source.”
46. It’s amazing how profitable it can be to give something away. -OpenMRS
47. “ Active” Transparency We don’t stop there. We actively work at communicating our thought processes to the community and encouraging others to do so as well.
48. The mediocre teacher tells. The good teacher explains. The superior teacher demonstrates. The great teacher inspires. – William Ward
49. Community-based development and ownership The community gives us our only chance for a fully realized system. Getting others involved requires us to share ownership of what’s evolving with everyone who takes part.
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51. Capacity Through Apprenticeship We consistently encourage those that we help to then go and help others, so that we may someday be made obsolete.
52. Not by age but by capacity is wisdom acquired. -Titus Maccius Plautus
53. Patients are first… others follow In all this, we are physicians. So underlying all the efforts, we must always focus on what’s important.
55. Avoid imagined needs We started off with the mistaken belief that a big system required a big design. We learned to make decisions based on priority and need instead of attempting to envision what we might need.
56. There's a difference between knowing the Path and walking the Path. -The Wachoskis, authors of “The Matrix”
57. Re-use, don’t re-invent We’ve achieved significant efficiencies through re-use. OpenMRS uses libraries from several open source projects.
58. Obviously, the highest type of efficiency is that which can utilize existing material to the best advantage – Jawaharlal Nehru
59. Flexible, standards-based foundation Utilizing existing standards, focusing on providing a strong & flexible foundation, and creating opportunities for innovation within that playground has served us immensely well.
60. As they say on my own Cape Cod, a rising tide lifts all the boats… -John F. Kennedy
61. Follow thought with action We’re pragmatists by nature. A lot of people come with good ideas, but we’ve found that often those fall through the cracks unless we quickly move to turn that idea into something tangible. Theory is great, but only when followed by action.
62. You’ll never plow a field by turning it over in your mind -Irish Proverb