Ubu[mu]ntu Mhealth: Dignified End of Life Care
Today, cancer is a leading cause of death around the world. According to the World Health Organization, 18.1 million new cancer cases and 9.5 million cancer deaths were estimated worldwide, and this number increased from 14.1 million new cases and 8.2 million deaths in 2012. The international community does not offer needed care to the huge number of cancer patients who need access to palliative care and end-of-life care. The 2018 GLOBOCAN data reported that there was an estimated 10,704 new cases of cancer and 7,662 cancer-related deaths in Rwanda. The survival rate of patients diagnosed with cancers is appallingly low in the developing world, including Rwanda. Some of the causes of poor cancer control in Rwanda are the public perception of the disease and its prevention, lack of early detection, and inadequate diagnostic and treatment facilities. It is important to bring evidence-based palliative care and increased research capacities in low and middle income where the majority of the population suffers from physical pain and lack of appropriate end-of-life care services. The World Health Organization defines palliative care as “an approach that improves the quality of life of patients and their families facing the problem associated with life-threatening illness, through the prevention and relief of suffering by means of early identification and impeccable assessment and treatment of pain and other problems, physical, psychosocial and spiritual” (WHO, 2012). According to the World Hospice and Palliative Care Alliance (WHPCA), 40 million people need palliative care every year and more than 20 million need this care at the end of life. Unfortunately, among those who need palliative care, 18 million of them will die with pain and distress. The disparity between the High-Income Countries and the Low- and Middle-Income Countries (LMICs) in accessibility and availability of morphine is an abyss. The developed countries are using more than 85% of morphine consumption worldwide for only 15% of the population compared with 15% for LMICs. Those in resource-poor settings suffer needlessly because they do not receive the pain medication they need. Most of the physicians from LMICs have shown that the opiophobia or fear of opioids is the main challenge keeping physicians from prescribing morphine
Ubu[mu]ntu Mhealth will help the population with advanced-stage cancer to stay connected with healthcare providers at the community level. We developed a smartphone-based application (app) to facilitate the management of palliative care needs of end-stage oncology patients during the global COVID-19 in Kigali, Rwanda. The smartphone application will track patients’ symptoms in real-time, which would enable the palliative care team to more efficiently triage and communicate with patients and improve patient outcomes (assessment and management of pain and other symptoms for advanced-stage cancer patients).
Ubu[mu]ntu Mhealth has two major components.
Phase 1: To pilot a Smart Phone-based symptom evaluation app with the use of qualitative interviews and focus groups with late-stage cancer patients and providers. An online registration system for palliative care patients at different levels of the healthcare system.
• A mobile application (Android and Ios) for the capture of palliative care patients' daily follow-up reports.
• An SMS/USSD/IVR-based system for the capture of palliative care patients' daily follow-up reports.
• A dashboard for palliative caregivers to follow up all registered patients (self-assessment)
• Intervention at the community level by nurses from health centers/or community health workers from villages.
Phase 2: To conduct a preliminary efficacy study of a Smart Phone-based symptom management app. This will be a small, randomized control trial looking at the mHealth platform vs standard of care for end-stage cancer patients with moderate to severe pain needs with pain control as the primary outcome and the expanded APCA POS scores as secondary outcomes.
Impact: A mHealth based intervention has never been used to assess and manage pain and symptom needs among cancer patients in developing countries. If the proposed intervention is found to be successful, the Rwandan minister of health has already expressed interest in expanding the program via a large multi-site randomized-controlled trial with hopes of expanding it throughout Rwanda.
Innovation: Cell-phone use is widespread in Rwanda with up to 80% usage in Kigali as well as government-supported initiatives to improve access to smartphones including subsidies and support for smartphone-based transactions. The technology has been proven to be as effective as conventional strategies in managing congestive heart failure, cancer, anti-retroviral therapy, and oncology treatment adherence. A recent meta-analysis has shown that text messaging tailored to patient-specific needs improved anti-retroviral adherence in HIV/AIDS patients.
Ubu[mu]mu Mhealth is a solution for the population with advanced-stage cancer diagnosed in the hospitals and discharged to "die" at home without the appropriate care. Our solution is holistic where physicians, nurses, social workers, spiritual leaders, families and community health workers will interact with the patient and vice versa. The Ubu[mu]ntu Mhealth is bringing equality, equity and Ubuntu to the ecosystem of the patients facing serious health threatening by bringing back the sense of humanity lost when discharged from the hospital.
Ubu[mu]ntu Mhealth is a project from the African Center for Research on End of Life Care, a non-profit organization to bring socio-cultural equality through “Ubuntu in End-of-life Care” in Africa. The team is multi-cultural, local, international, skilled, and experts in palliative and end-of-life care. The project was developed by Dr. Christian Ntizimira, Fulbright Alumni who graduated from Harvard Medical School. He pioneered the integration of palliative care and end-of-life care into health services rendered to Rwandan cancer patients and in the community settings. Through his program (2008-2013), more than 1500 health care providers and community health workers have learned the principles of cancer prevention control & palliative care leading to a five-fold increase in the prescription of morphine, an essential pain medication.
- Improve confidence in, engagement with, and use of healthcare services globally.
- Pilot
The team is interested to bring the concept of palliative care as an important topic to invest in and support as a problem to solve. Because palliative care is neglected in the global health agenda due to the misconception of the term. Palliative care is not about death but about life and the dying process is part of the living moment of the patient. We hope this platform with help to extend the community as "the solution" to support this project to grow in Rwanda. We believe in the community as we believe in "Ubuntu" which means "people are people through other people" and that is the motivation to leverage potential solutions to not left no one behind.
- Technology (e.g. software or hardware, web development/design, data analysis, etc.)
Cell phone use is widespread in Rwanda with up to 80% usage in Kigali as well as government-supported initiatives to improve access to smartphones including subsidies and support for smart phone based transactions. Cell phone use has emerged as a useful tool to facilitate healthcare services in low and middle-income countries. There are many examples of mHealth implementation in low and middle-income countries, most common thus far include 1-way text message reminders and phone reminders for follow-up. The technology has been proven to be as effective as conventional strategies in managing congestive heart failure, cancer, anti-retroviral therapy, and oncology treatment adherence. A recent meta-analysis has shown that text messaging tailored to patient-specific needs improved anti-retroviral adherence in HIV/AIDS patients. No current form of phone-based technology has been used to provide palliative-care services although the technology is readily adaptable to this context. The COVID-19 situation has shown more than ever that there is a need for processes digitization. The future involves decreasing as much as possible physical interactions to prevent the spread of contagious diseases.
A mHealth based intervention has never been used to assess and manage pain and symptom needs among cancer patients in developing countries. If the proposed intervention is found to be successful, the Rwandan minister of health has already expressed interest in expanding the program via a large multi-site randomized-controlled trial with hopes of expanding it throughout Rwanda. Given this level of support and based on the COVID-19 pandemic situation, the mHealth platform has the potential to impact not only patients that are currently in the Rwandan health system but could eventually provide a low-cost solution, culturally appropriate and sustainable intervention that could be scaled up to other low and middle-income settings around the world, where pain and symptom needs remain largely unmet. [3] More specifically, this app could significantly enhance the community health worker (CHW) program as it could improve communication between CHWs and their patients, as well as provide a meaningful data collection tool.
To measure the effect of integrated palliative care on pain and overall quality of life, we will use the African Palliative Outcomes Scale (POS) to prospectively assess patients referred for palliative care at baseline and patients who already are receiving palliative care within the district networks. The POS has been validated in East Africa and is brief enough to be used with very ill patients. Both initial and follow-up assessments may be done either in the hospital or at home by a palliative care team doctor or nurse. We expect that patients already receiving palliative care will have better POS pain and/or quality of life scores by at least one point (on a scale of 0 – 5). We propose a two-phase, mixed qualitative and quantitative study to develop and test a smartphone mobile application that monitors the physical and psychosocial symptoms of patients with advanced cancer, and reports this data to their palliative care team via an online dashboard. The outlined processes of development in both Phase 1 and Phase 2 of the study are guided by the software development life-cycle method, which includes designing, developing evaluating, and testing an application.
The philosophy of ACREOL is "The way people die can reflect how the society lives". There is no change with evidence-based factors and the research part of the project will demonstrate the improvement of the quality of life of patients facing life-limiting illnesses and access to technology.
Step 1: Pilot Test the Smart Phone Technology: All participants will have access to standard care but in addition, participants in the pilot, will receive twice-weekly automated app messages with the African Palliative-Care Outcomes scale which will be sent to assess pain control as well as other symptoms for 1 month. The Palliative Care team will have a SmartPhone or tablet device with access to all of the enrolled patients, including a desktop-based dashboard where they will be able to track all enrolled patients and assist with the early identification of patients with worsening POS scores. Any score of 2 or higher will be flagged for attention.
Step 2 - Focus Group Discussions: The PC staff will identify potential patients to participate in the focus group discussions (FGDs) by referring any of their home care patients who have either moderate or severe pain. Patients will then be formally screened for eligibility by study staff and informed consent will be administered to those who volunteer. Eligible patients will be at least 18 years old, diagnosed with advanced cancers, and have moderate or severe pain, as defined by the use of World Health Organization (WHO), as requiring step 2 drugs (tramadol or codeine) or WHO step 3 drugs (narcotics other than codeine) to manage their pain.
Step 3 – Key Informant Interviews: A trained study staff member will conduct individual interviews using a semi-structured interview guide designed by the study team with all members of the interdisciplinary team from ACREOL, the head of the cancer division for the Rwandan Ministry of Health, as well as providers from the nearby district hospital (Kibagabaga Hospital) and national referral hospital (University Central Hospital of Kigali) which are the two most common sites through which new referrals are made to ACREOL.
Step 4- Exit Interviews: After patients have completed the one-month of the pilot, we will conduct exit interviews using a semi-structured interview guide designed by the team in order to obtain feedback on the intervention including experience with the app, efficacy in addressing their needs, frequency of transmission of messages, problems in the receipt of message or challenges in responding to the app, reactions to provider responses.
It is a pilot Smart Phone-based symptom evaluation app with used to support, to treat late-stage cancer patients. An online registration system for palliative care patients at different levels of the healthcare system using a mobile application (Android and Ios) for the capture of palliative care patients' daily follow-up reports. An SMS/USSD/IVR-based system for the capture of palliative care patients' daily follow-up reports. A dashboard for palliative caregivers to follow up with all registered patients (self-assessment) which will bring intervention at the community level by nurses from health centers/or community health workers from villages.
- A new application of an existing technology
- Ancestral Technology & Practices
- Artificial Intelligence / Machine Learning
- Behavioral Technology
- Software and Mobile Applications
- Virtual Reality / Augmented Reality
- 3. Good Health and Well-being
- 10. Reduced Inequalities
- 11. Sustainable Cities and Communities
- 16. Peace, Justice, and Strong Institutions
- 17. Partnerships for the Goals
- Rwanda
- Burundi
- Congo, Dem. Rep.
- Nonprofit
Ubu[mu]ntu project comes from the Ubuntu philosophy which means "people are people through other people" or "I am because you are". It represents humanness, a pervasive spirit of caring within the community in which the individuals in the community love one another. As a people-centered philosophy, Ubuntu stipulates that a person’s worth depends on social, cultural, and spiritual criteria. It requires a life that depends on a normative engagement with the community, a substantive appreciation of the common good, and a constitutive engagement with one another in a rational and ethical community. Ubu[mu]ntu incorporates diversity, equity, and inclusivity into your work through that philosophy rooted in African culture.
The model business will be using the Ubuntu approach through the community health-based insurance for sustainability and equity. Mutual aid and community solidarity value systems have remained resilient traits of Rwanda's society, and continue to be translated into coping strategies in the health care area. CBHI schemes in Rwanda are health insurance organizations based on a partnership between the community and health care providers. As consensus built up on the benefits of the CBHI schemes, a multi-level leadership developed in the country to provide support to the adaptation, and extension of the schemes. Political leaders at the central level, starting from the Presidency, called for the mobilization of all actors to support the implementation of CBHI schemes throughout the country.
- Individual consumers or stakeholders (B2C)
Through the Ministry of Health/Rwanda Biomedical Center (MoH/RBC), private sectors (Telecommunication companies: MTN, AIRTEL), and international partners by selling services or contracting government agencies to provide palliative care services at home. The CHBI will reimburse the services at home and that will help to sustain our services. From this project, further apps development will be conducted through an iterative process, with the PC team providing software development expertise and the PC organization helping to adapt the platform to the context of Rwandan patients. In 2010, the Ministry issued a “National Palliative Care Policy,” a “Five-Year (2010 – 2014) Strategic Plan for Palliative Care for Incurable Diseases,” and “Standards & Guidelines for Provision of Palliative Care for Incurable Diseases.” In addition, the National HIV/AIDS Strategy includes palliative care, and a national cancer strategy that includes palliative care is under development. The importance to the Government of Rwanda of developing palliative care to improve the quality of life of Rwandese with serious chronic illnesses is made clear in the ”National Palliative Care Policy” and ”Strategic Plan”.
ACREOL was able to work with different international partners like PATH, CDC Foundation, Bristol-Myers Squibb, and ASCP (America Society in Clinical Pathology in research, Data science, and implementation of model palliative care.
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Founder/Executive Director