OHIDAS Toolkit, the PHC, and Tanya Pakar: A Multi-level, Vertically Integrated Digital Health Promotion, Primary Prevention and Telemedicine Provision Programme

Nicholas Pang Tze Ping and Helen Benedict Lasimbang and Mohd. Hanafi Ahmad Hijazi and Mohd Nizar Bin Hamild and Mohd Azhar Bin Dris and Wendy Shoesmith and Fumihiko Yokota and Rafiqul Islam Maruf and Naoki Nakashima (2020) OHIDAS Toolkit, the PHC, and Tanya Pakar: A Multi-level, Vertically Integrated Digital Health Promotion, Primary Prevention and Telemedicine Provision Programme. The 40th Joint Conference on Medical Informatics. pp. 1-6.

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Abstract

Multiple challenges abound in Malaysian healthcare delivery, including a high prevalence of non-communicable disease associated with poorly reinforced lifestyle practices, service delivery challenges in primary care, and difficulty in adapting English-language evidence-based research to Kadazan culturespecific health beliefs. University Malaysia Sabah (UMS) University Hospital (HUMS) conceptualized a three-pronged, vertically integrated digital health system to address these shortfalls intelligently. Firstly, a mobile application called OHIDAS (“health” or “wellness” in the local Kadazan language) was built to serve two major objectives namely promoting healthy lifestyle practices among the community and advocating for health screening prior to illness to maintain health and well-being in our communities and prevent illness caused through NCDs. There are four stages of OHIDAS; health promotion and primary prevention, telemedicine, capturing of patients’ bioinformatics, and full integration of clinical care with mobile application. Secondly, a proprietary telemedicine system called Tanya Pakar was developed and expedited in view of the COVID-19 pandemic. Thirdly, HUMS collaborated with Kyushu University to develop a Malaysian Portable Health Clinic which heightens rural access to tertiary level healthcare through a synergy of telemedicine, trained human capital, and portable health devices. In conclusion, OHIDAS has the potential to become a highly effective tool for health promotion and primary prevention

Item Type: Article
Keyword: OHIDAS , Wellness , Telemedicine , Smart Health , PHC
Subjects: R Medicine > RC Internal medicine > RC31-1245 Internal medicine > RC581-951 Specialties of internal medicine > RC925-935 Diseases of the musculoskeletal system
R Medicine > RT Nursing > RT89-120 Specialties in nursing
Department: FACULTY > Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences
Depositing User: ABDULLAH BIN SABUDIN -
Date Deposited: 08 Aug 2023 15:40
Last Modified: 08 Aug 2023 15:40
URI: https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/36306

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