Human-Centered Design

Developing digital solutions with the experts — end users

April 13, 2022

Digital health tools can optimize and strengthen national health systems. But to be sustainable and effective, must be designed and implemented in partnership with users. Learn how a new supervision system, developed using human-centered design principles, is contributing to a culture of care

Challenge
How can health workers monitor the performance of their facilities with a paper based system?
Solution
By using a participatory human-centered design process to deliver an appropriate digital solution
Location
Tanzania
Partners
Government of Tanzania
Path Expertise Areas

Problem Definition

Design & Development

Prototype Evaluation

Product Validation

Program Implementation

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The challenge

To enable a strong health system, health workers must be able to monitor the performance of their facilities. Until recently in Tanzania, this process was fragmented and paper based. Health managers and frontline health workers had limited visibility into how their hospitals and clinics were performing against health system targets, with few opportunities to track progress and understand where improvements were needed.

In the past, health facilities were subject to frequent supportive supervision visits by different actors—including nonprofits, donors, and representatives of the Ministry of Health—for a range of purposes. These visits were often uncoordinated and resulted in health facilities receiving numerous paper feedback reports and checklists that were hard to manage, track, and put into action. Supervisory visits sometimes didn’t happen or the findings wouldn’t be shared back with health facilities, leading to broken feedback loops. As a result, supervisors and health workers were often unaware of the feedback delivered during past supervision visits and struggled to monitor progress.

The approach

Under the Data Use Partnership, the government of Tanzania partnered with PATH to digitalize this performance monitoring process. A cornerstone of the Data Use Partnership has been the development of a digital facility supportive supervision system used by health managers, district health officials, and frontline health workers to systematically link performance data and supervision recommendations. AfyaSS, as the system is called, uses a single dashboard to consolidate supervisory checklists, feedback forms, recommendations, and action plans across all health areas. In the past, different health areas used different checklists to monitor performance data, which made it difficult to track a health facility’s overall performance. Consolidating these into a single, shared checklist made it easier to evaluate and strengthen service delivery.

AfyaSS was designed using a human-centered design approach. Beginning in 2018, the government of Tanzania and PATH embarked on a participatory design process that included a desk review of existing guidelines and tools, field visits, stakeholder workshops, and user advisory groups to identify common challenges and system requirements of the future AfyaSS.

The government employed user advisory groups composed of key health actors, software designers, and engineers to map the previous paper-based systems and redefine workflows in support of health system strengthening. Health actors, for example, revealed that supervisory visits would often only focus on malaria-specific indicators or maternal and child health, rather than looking holistically at a facility’s performance. Based on that feedback, they reviewed multiple health area–specific checklists and helped consolidate them into a single, synthesized digital format.

Input from users also indicated that health managers often struggled to verify if a supervision visit occurred. Supervisors sometimes falsely reported visits, and paper-based systems did not allow for any means of accountability. In response to this persistent challenge, AfyaSS was designed to include geotagging features that log the start and end locations of a visit, prompting users to begin their evaluation when they are in the vicinity of their assigned health facility. These quality control measures help to validate supervision visits and promote accountability.

One of the leading goals of the Data Use Partnership is to equip Tanzania’s health sector and workforce with data use skills for the country’s changing digital landscape. Photo: PATH/Trevor Snapp.

One of the leading goals of the Data Use Partnership is to equip Tanzania’s health sector and workforce with data use skills for the country’s changing digital landscape. Photo: PATH/Trevor Snapp.

The solution

AfyaSS ensures that health workers at the facility level, managers at the regional level, and policymakers at the national level have reliable, real-time access to information on the performance of Tanzania’s health system. AfyaSS includes checklists for different health areas, system notifications to remind health workers about facility targets, dashboard features to monitor progress toward health system goals, and action plans linked to data from previous visits. Offline components allow for use of the system in remote areas with limited connectivity. Together, these features enable health workers to act on the performance data made available to them.

“The technology is what makes the supportive supervision system appealing and pushes us to make sure we’re frequently logging in to see the supervisions conducted, action items, and [to] follow up to see if the issues were resolved.”
— Dr. Charles Migunga, government of Tanzania

The impact of using human-centered design

As a result of the human-centered design process, AfyaSS is helping to contribute to a culture of care that is focused on addressing user pain points and data-driven quality improvement. AfyaSS has been rolled out to all 26 regions in Tanzania and is actively in use in 24, with plans to continue training users and implementing change management strategies to increase system use.

Understanding the needs, desires, and behaviors of all key stakeholders and delivering an appropriate solution has been instrumental in improving its uptake and adoption.

Better solutions. Better outcomes. Better sustainability.