Monday, November 5, 2012

Closing the voice-enabled disaster communication project but looking to do more


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Summary of the VoiceICT4D project outcomes

  • LIRNEasia, through a stakeholder forum, advocated the Sri Lanka Disaster Management Center (DMC) to move towards a multi-agency situational-awareness platform by creating a register of alerting authorities and then sharing it's call center and Interactive Voice Response (IVR) system resources for emergency communication.
  • The “Do you Hear Me” video, communicating the need for voice-enabled Information Communication Technologies (ICTs), to empower community-based emergency coordination, was visited by 496 viewers, of which 48 or them shared their knowledge on the subject. UNISDR debut film festival on DRR, selected our video as as one of the best three in the category of “best human interest story”
  • Peer-reviewed scientific articles presented the realization study evidence emphasizing the practical technical instabilities and deficits in those technologies. The message was news to most researchers and practitioners. IVR-based solutions are gradually gaining momentum.


What next?

A common consensus by various stakeholders are that the Freedom Fone IVR and Sahana disaster management system integration must be completed. The integration would serve non-latin scripting language and lesser computer literate communities. Moreover, develop an off the shelf implementable comprehensive crisis management solution that can be integrated with main stream media or other emergency management organizations.

There are three broad emergency communication use cases that were discovered through the VoiceICT4D activities:
  1. a radio station would manage a missing persons registry comforting concerned citizens of who are missing and who were found
  2. citizen journalists would share risk information of incident reports to effectively coordinate and respond to those troubled situations
  3. community-based disaster management organizations would coordinate their rescue and relief efforts using interactive voice.
The VoiceICT4D project intends to seek resources to complete the integration, implement, and pilot the comprehensive end-to-end crisis management system. The pilot study would investigate the utility and robustness of such an implementation when applied to the three use cases above. Moreover, the pilot would consider implementing them in diverse environments to better understand the adaptability of the technology. VoiceICT4D would transition from the invention stage to an implementation stage; where the technology would be field tested to offer a stable solution to the global crisis management community.

Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Texting to Save Lives in South Asia (repost)

Texting to save lives in South Asia

​by Marc Ellison

Watch and listen to the audio slideshow

Imagine a world where mobile technology helps to save lives by quickly alerting health authorities of new outbreaks of H1N1, chickenpox, and malaria. Such an early warning system was recently piloted, by a technological think tank LIRNEasia, non-governmental organization Sarvodaya, both from Sri Lanka, and the Rural Technology and Business Incubator in India.
Supported by IDRC, the Real-Time Bio-Surveillance Program tested a modern alternative to the paper-based process introduced by the British over a century ago. Using the current system, local data on infectious diseases takes three to four weeks to make its way to national epidemiology centres, at which point an escalation of common symptoms can be detected. By then, a disease may have caused much harm. In 2003, for example, Sri Lanka’s Central Province faced a fever-like disease that went unnoticed until it claimed three lives.
A LIRNEasia survey found that many healthcare workers only learned of outbreaks through the media, by word of mouth, or from peers.
“We need to be able to view cases in real-time to detect outbreaks swiftly. Otherwise it takes several days before the hospitals send the notification paper forms. By that time the patient may be dead or discharged,” says one public health inspector.

Streamlined disease surveillance
To help make real-time disease detection a reality, LIRNEasia tested a system using mobile phones in an IDRC-supported pilot study.
“Mobile phones are the most affordable technology, with the widest reach in India and Sri Lanka. Data is submitted instantaneously, compared with the current ‘snail mail’ system. It’s also much cheaper. It costs a small fraction of a cent to send data, whereas sending forms via regular mail costs 5 cents,” explains Nuwan Waidyanatha, a LIRNEasia project director.

The concept is simple, but the technology behind it is cutting edge.

Community healthcare workers record a patient’s diagnosis using software installed on a mobile phone. They then submit the data directly to national epidemiology centres in Colombo, Sri Lanka and Chennai, India. A data-mining software — developed at Carnegie Mellon University, United States —analyzes this data on a daily basis, allowing epidemiologists to visualize potential epidemics by using mapping tools.

The specialists can then use the system to return messages to health inspectors, alerting them to potential dangers. These messages can then be translated into the local dialect, relayed to the communities, and placed on bulletin boards in village centres.
The research team tested the system in 28 facilities in the southern state of Tamil Nadu in India, and 12 hospitals in the North Western province in Sri Lanka.

A better way to spot outbreaks

The bio-surveillance system has already proved its value. During the 15-months testing phase, the system identified more than a dozen instances of potential disease outbreaks. Four of those (chicken pox, acute diarrheal disease, respiratory tract infection, and mumps) were confirmed by health authorities.

Referring to the chickenpox outbreak in Kurunegala district, Sri Lanka, Waidyanatha says, “The platform was able to detect this outbreak much faster than the paper-based system. The divisional Medical Officer of Health found out about it the next day.”

LIRNEasia found that the new system could reduce operational and archiving costs by 30-50%. For example, public health inspectors would no longer need to travel to town once a week to compile their data; thus eliminating the need for travel subsidies. By limiting potential outbreaks, the new platform could lessen the financial strain on the Indian and Sri Lankan health systems.
Health officials involved with the project indicated that it could be a useful tool to support long term planning and allocation of health resources. The new system can even be used to identify everyday issues in local communities. For example, it “identified that men in Tamil Nadu were complaining of pain during harvest season,” Waidyanatha says. “This highlighted how farmers needed better tools.”

Challenges ahead

LIRNEasia has identified challenges still facing the new system in India and Sri Lanka.

The new process may eliminate the risk of manual-system errors from clerks deciphering the handwriting on paper forms or manually copying patient information into logs. But new problems arose. Submission error rates ranged from 23 to 45% — mostly from different spellings of medical terms such as tuberculosis or the misuse of synonyms like dementia and memory loss. These errors affected the system’s complex statistical analysis, resulting in false predictions.

Although the healthcare workers in this first pilot easily learned how to enter the patient data, some of them saw the new system as a bureaucratic hindrance, while others feared the system would take away their jobs.

A sustainable solution?

Waidyanatha calls the new system a “usable solution,” but one that requires further enhancement.
Subsequent testing in North Western province, by the Sri Lankan Ministry of Health, identified more areas for improvement. The infectious disease control nurses involved in the trial found it difficult to enter data with the mobile keypad, leading researchers to conclude that more sophisticated phones, or tablets, with touch screens or the capability of reading handwriting may be better.

It is clear that technological will and capacity are important factors – but that they need to be examined in the broader context of political will and social acceptance by the different users.
The project has raised awareness of the important gains that technology could bring to public health surveillance in developing countries like India and Sri Lanka.  More research is needed to find the right tools for busy healthcare workers.

Tuesday, July 3, 2012

Beyond Tsunami Warning in a Vocal Society

My first public lecture: the 3rd LIRNEasia Public Lecture was conducted at a time when the Sri Lanka National Disaster Management Center (DMC) was being questioned for it's reliability. The Public Lecture follows two major hazard events: 1) 2011 November 21 Matara Mini Cyclone and 2) 2012 April 11 false tsunami evacuation.

The Government of Sri Lanka failed to warn the fishermen of the deadly mini cyclone that lead to 29 deaths. Detection theorist may label this incident as a missed alarm but essentially it is a true alarm with failed actions. There was a lot of finger pointing between agencies for one denying the responsibility over the other. Such a tragic situation could have been over come if a register of alerting authorities with a profile and procedures and a multi-agency situational awareness technology platform had been in place. The DMC held a stakeholder workshop to discuss a way forward.
With respect to incident 2), the tsunami evacuations continued even after the threat was called off, which insinuates a lack of competence. Decision theorist, from the eyes of a Policy-maker's loss function (i.e. government bureaucrats and politicians prospective), would consider this as a success; thus, the ability to warn of any tsunamigenic earthquake. However, from the eyes of Stakeholder's loss function, such as fishermen not going out to sea anticipating a tsunami, the false warning deprive them of a days house hold income.

The Public Lecture was partially funded by the Humanitarian Innovation Fund (HIF) through the VoiceICT4D project. The aim of this action was to strategically address the public at a right time when the message was sure to be heard by those who should hear it. The lecture presented the formula for removing the aforementioned uncertainties. The Director General of the Sri Lanka DMC, himself, was present at this lecture and was appointed the task of moderating this event. His words following the main presentation was “thank you Nuwan this is an eye-opener.”

The public lecture message intended for the Director General and the audience to hear was that the inter-agency rivalry and reduction of false warnings can be achieved through the adoption of interoperable emergency standards along with the policies and procedures that wrap around those standards. The VoiceICT4D project was designed to educate society of the power of voice-enabled technologies and interoperable data standards. A summary of the Public Lecture talks, on LIRNEasia's blog, outlines the key points.

Sri Lankan's, like most other Eastern societies are accustomed to talking to one another over the phone whether it be personal, business, or informing each other of a crisis, more so than text-ing. The video “do you hear me?”, which was produced through the HIF grant, was screened to remind the public and the DMC of the local requirement. Coincidently, the DMC had invested in a call center and an IVR for emergency information collection and dissemination. LIRNEasia has offered to share the lessons learned from it's voice-enabled ICT for Disaster pilot.