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Communications for Better Health (CBH) - Ghana

Country

Ghana

Region

Global, Africa, South Asia

Programme Summary

Developed in 1990 by the Dreyfus Health Foundation (DHF) and conducted by the Health Foundation of Ghana (HFG), this programme creates interactive information centres that disseminate, collect, organise and exhange practical health information. The purpose of the project is to improve access to medical information for both urban and rural health professionals, as well as the general public, throughout Ghana.

Communication Strategies

CBH is initiated within a hospital setting, university, or medical library. The site is often determined through contacts with a country's Ministry of Health and/or local NGOs. An assessment of the site's computer technology usually leads to provision, by DHF, of some computer hardware and software, such as CD-ROM technology and databases such as MEDLINE, PASCAL, and LILACS. Local users are trained to search these databases.


Two types of printed materials are produced as a result. First, current health information is disseminated through a locally prepared 'Ghana Health Digest'. The selection of abstracts (from MEDLINE, for example) takes into consideration local health conditions, and is adapted accordingly. The digest also contains relevant articles written by local health specialists (such as "A Guide to Malaria Prevention and Control"), summaries of findings from community health projects, personal health experiences, interviews, "Frequently asked Questions," "Questionnaires and Answers," and quizzes. 2500 copies of the digest are distributed quarterly to health professionals across the country (doctors, nurses, pharmacists, and medical students) via hospitals, clinics, medical libraries, and the District Health Management Teams of the Ministry of Health. Through an order form in the digest, users may request full-text articles of abstracts or database searches on specific topics of health and medical interest.


Second, local databases are created by local health professionals and other interested parties, who, working together, select information from international resources and from in-country or regional colleagues. Solutions to common local health problems are also gleaned from local health professionals. The database of local health information is kept in each country's information centre (head office) in paper format (and often in electronic format, also). People call and visit the centres for local and international medical information.


A national version of this database, the African Index Medicus (AIM), is being developed. AIM provides an index of African health literature and information sources using CDS-ISIS software. AIM identifies bibliographic sources and includes databases on information experts and sources of research in health-related areas of African countries.


The public is reached through television and the newspaper. Highlights from the digest are read bi-weekly on the "National Morning Breakfast Show" on Ghana Television (GTV); the Daily Graphic Newspaper has featured several articles in its weekly health column. HFG is also negotiating with Ghana Broadcasting Corporation to broadcast information from the digest on the radio.


Basic health information on topics covered includes: typhoid fever, meningococcal disease, water borne diseases, diarrhoea, worm infestation, epilepsy, cardio-vascular diseases, HIV/AIDS, maternal health, infertility, teenage pregnancy, jaundice in infants, drugs, immunisations, CPR, and stress. All content is collected, organised, and adapted by HFG staff, and is then reviewed and edited by the local editorial board, which is composed of faculty from the University of Ghana Medical School and Ghanaian doctors.

Development Issues

Health.

Key Points

Programme organisers were motivated by the observation that health information in Ghana is limited. In urban areas, the high cost of books and journals is prohibitive; library collections are often outdated, irregular, and incomplete. In rural areas, poverty and lack of telecommunication services make access to this information difficult.


As of 2002, there are fifteen CBH sites.

Partners

DHF, HFG, Association for Health Information and Libraries in Africa (AHILA) and the World Health Organization (WHO).

Contact


DHF, HFG, Association for Health Information and Libraries in Africa (AHILA) and the World Health Organization (WHO).

Source

DHF site.; and Chapter 2 ("Insights from Existing Initiatives") of "Unlocking economic opportunity in the south through local content: A proposal from the G8 Dotforce" by Peter Armstrong, OneWorld (Editor); Chris Addison, Consultant; Subbiah Arunachalam, MSSRF; Peter Ballantyne, IICD; Hugo Besemer, Consultant; Diane Cabell, Harvard Law School; Pete Cranston, OneWorld; James Jeynes, Accenture; Barbara Keating, OneWorld; Eric Saltzman, Berkman Center, Harvard Law School; John West, Consultant - March 2002. For a copy of the full report, please see Open Knowledge Workspace page on DGroups site, which can be accessed from DGroups site. Or contact Peter Armstrong, Director, One World peter.armstrong@oneworld.net


Placed on the Communication Initiative site August 27 2002
Last Updated August 27 2002

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