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Tag Archives: GNU Health

GNU Health and Khadas to deliver Artificial Intelligence in Medicine

30 Wednesday Sep 2020

Posted by Luis Falcon in GNU Health, GNU solidario

≈ Comments Off on GNU Health and Khadas to deliver Artificial Intelligence in Medicine

Tags

Artificial Intelligence, big data, bioinformatics, genetics, genomics, GHCon, GHCon2020, GNU Health, GNU Health Federation, GNU solidario, Khadas, Libre Software

It is official: GNU Solidario, the Spanish NGO behind GNU Health (GH) and Khadas Technologies have signed the “GNU Health Alliance of Academic and Research Institutions”, to research and deliver Artificial Intelligence to the world of medicine.

This is very exciting. GNU Health covers genomics, medical genetics, Dx imaging and social medicine, areas where definitely we can use the power of AI for better diagnostics, personalized treatments, decision support, disease prevention and health promotion.

The GNU Health embedded project using Khadas for Artificial Intelligence in Medicine

What is truly revolutionary is that we will be using affordable single board computers, like the Khadas VIM3, where they could work alone or in the context of the GNU Health Federation, doing massive virtual parallel computing.

Citizens, health professionals and institutions don’t have to spend millions to access the latest in technology. In GNU Health, this has always been our philosophy. Health is must be remain a universal human right, and that is what we do in GNU Health. We deliver state-of-the-art technology all over the world with Libre Software. No hidden lines of code, no hidden agenda.

One of Khadas devices, the VIM3 includes a Neural Processing Unit (NPU) that will be the heart of the AI engine.

GNU Health HMIS with genetics package running on a Khadas VIM3 Pro

We can use our GH Federation model which gathers massive information of protein natural variants, and combine it with the latest tools in Artificial Intelligence. We will be giving a giant leap, unveiling the real clinical significance of many mutations that today remain a mystery about how they would affect our health. In GNU Health we are determine to build this critical bridge between the person, the clinician and the researcher.

Another area that we’ll work on is Dx imaging. Training Khadas devices to differentiate many types of lesions will help the pathologist or the surgeon to take real-time decisions in the operating room based on the picture GNU Health camera takes and the diagnostic that the GH embedded return about the specimen.

In the upcoming GNU Health Conference – GHCon2020– , there will be sessions about this project, so we invite anyone to register at the conference, that this year will be online due to the COVID pandemics. Register at GHCon2020

GHCon2020, the annual GNU Health conference

About GNU Solidario: GNU Solidario is a non-for-profit organization that works globally, focused on Social Medicine and health informatics (using Libre Software).

GNU Solidario is the organization behind GNU Health, the award
winning Libre Health and Hospital Information System, deployed in many
health and research institutions around the globe.

About Khadas: Khadas develops superior quality, high performance single board computers for makers, developers, and tinkerers, that come with open source, professional technical support, and a global community for issue discussion & idea sharing.

GNU Health: Helping Laos Heal from UXO physical and emotional trauma.

25 Saturday Jul 2020

Posted by Luis Falcon in GNU Health

≈ Comments Off on GNU Health: Helping Laos Heal from UXO physical and emotional trauma.

Tags

ehealth, GNU Health, GNU solidario, Laos, Libre Software, Public Health, Social Medicine, UXO

Luis Falcon with the Lao CMR staff in charge at the 2 year anniversary of the implementation
GNU Health implementation anniversary at Laos Center of Medical Rehabilitation

Laos is one of the most heavily bombed countries in the world. During the period from 1964-1973, over 2 million tons of bombs were dropped by B-52 aircrafts across the 2/3 of the country during the “Secret War”. This nine-year period bombing caused thousands of deaths and a unprecedented human displacement that exceeded a hundred thousand civilians from the poorest areas of the country.

The tragic legacy of that period remains today. Thirty percent (30%) of those bombs remains active (Unexploded Ordnances – UXOs – ), causing over 300 victims every year until 2008, and now down to 50 / year. Nearly 60% of the UXOs accidents result in death, and 40% of the victims are children[1].

If the explosion does not kill the person, it causes severe traumatic injuries resulting in the amputation of limbs in many of the victims. Physical and emotional trauma that takes many years to heal. In addition, many UXO victims suffer from Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), a serious condition that can be devastating for the victim and their families[2].

But there is hope. The wonderful people from Laos are resilient, and they are willing to cope and move forward. I have been in Laos several times in the last few years, in the context of GNU Health implementations both in Mahosot Hospital and the Center for Medical Rehabilitation – CMR – .

The Center for Medical Rehabilitation (CMR), located in Vientiane, is a specialized institution that helps people with disabilities and victims survivors of UXOs. The CMR, formerly known as the National Rehabilitation Center initially provided prosthetic limbs for victims of war. Today they have extended the services to provide services to children with disabilities across the country. Some of the services include medical and community based rehabilitation, special education for the deaf and the blind and vocational school for people with disabilities.

At the moment I had the meeting with the hospital directors, I knew that we had to focus both in short term surgery as well as in the long term psychological, physiotherapy and occupational therapy that would allow the person to be fully functional in the society. Again, I was facing a project in need of Social Medicine.

We trained a local multidisciplinary team of nurses, doctors, physiotherapists, social workers, computer scientists, psychologists, administrative personnel, pharmacists and accountants.

CMR nurses. The heart of the institution

It was during that period that I created the package “functioning and disability“.

General patient information and Functioning & Disability tab. Red boxes on these two sections denote UXO related information

Some of the GNU Health functional modules that CMR decided to use included surgery, socio-economics, ICD-10, nursing, physical therapy, stock, accounting, lifestyle, reporting, health services and diagnostic imaging, among others. In addition to those, we included the “functioning and disability” package.

The GNU Health “Functioning and Disability” package integrates the ideas of WHO Health Organization International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health. This functionality complements the ICD-10 classification of diseases, with the concept of functionality. For example, after a person has been diagnosed with diabetes, we must go beyond the biology and molecular bases of the disease, and evaluate how diabetes impacts of on her daily activities and integration in the society and environment.

GNU Health contextualizes the health condition in the particular individual, key for personalized medicine. In the UXOs example, the related ICD10 codes are visible from the main chart:

  • S88 : Traumatic amputation of lower limb
  • F43.1: Post-traumatic stress disorder

This diagnostic information is relevant and key for epidemiology and statistics, but if we want to practice medicine, we must take into account the social aspect of these conditions, and how they affect the person in her particular environment.

The GNU Health Functioning and disability assessment has two sections. The first section is a summary of impairments related to the Cognitive, Visual, Hearing, Speech, Hand, Mobility and Activities and Participation .

The second section is a detailed assessment of Body functions, Body structures, Activities and Participation and Environmental factors and barriers. Each of these groups has its own set of qualifiers and components that will provide the health professionals where to put the focus to the time and the context of that person, as well as to evaluate the progression of the conditions.

We can now study, with a multi-disciplinary team, how the body structure and body functioning impairments relate to the person capacities and engagements in social activities; daily household tasks; using the current public transportation system or the level of access to Labor and employment services.

This is my concept of medicine, the assessment of the bio, psycho, social determinants of health and disease. Medicine is, first and foremost, a social science, and GNU Health is first and foremost, a social project.

Example of GNU Health person functioning and disability assessment

Celebrating the success of cooperation: During a two-year period of using GNU Health, they have provided over 67,000 medical services, automated their finances, prescriptions, stock management, medical appointments and evaluations, diagnostic imaging, and the demographics tracking for the thousands of patients they assist.

CMR Cope team helping people in Lao rural areas

Local capacity building: CMR trained its own local group of professionals who customize and maintain GNU Health, in their own Lao language. This creates a local and ethical business model, very important for the long-term sustainability of the project.

A well-deserved award. The work that CMR has been doing in Laos for the rehabilitation of their people has been magnificent. Their multidisciplinary approach to trauma, from the acute care and surgery, to the physical therapy and the work in the field is an example for many of us. CMR has helped thousands of people every year healing from the UXO physical and emotional scars, moving forward and being able to get re-inserted in society, and we are so proud to have been part of it.

A delegation of the Laos Ministry of Health presented at GNU Health Con 2016 the implementation in the Lao Center for Medical Rehabilitation – CMR – and in Mahosot hospital. We are so proud that they are part of the GNU Health community.

CMR received the GNU Health Social Medicine Award in 2016 for best Institution.

  1. – Somnuk Vorasarn, Chansaly Phommavong, Khonephet Sely. GNU Health in Mahosot Hospital – GNU Health Con 2016
  2. A cross-sectional community study of post-traumatic stress disorder and social support in Lao People’s Democratic Republic

GNU Health in Tanzania. An implementation case.

26 Tuesday May 2020

Posted by Luis Falcon in GNU Health

≈ Comments Off on GNU Health in Tanzania. An implementation case.

Tags

Africa, GNU Health, Hospital Information System, Libre Software, SDG

The following note comes from Mike and Ulf, two Swedish colleagues that implemented GNU Health in Tanzania. The specific institution is Nkinga Hospital. Mike and Ulf have been part of the GH commuity for years. I met personally Mike at the GNUHealthCon 2019 in Brussels. Their work is phenomenal.

The title of his document was “How to Implement GNU Health in Tanzania in 10 days”. We’re very thankful to them for sharing this very inspiring story, and hope is a lesson to all of us!

Background

It all started with that we had studied free software and networks at universities in our spare time for a few years. When we had finished the studies we decided to do something with the knowledge we got. We got in contact with Nkinga hospital in Tanzania and we decided to help them to build the IT-infrastructure.
In September 2011, we went to Tanzania to build a computer network to be able and communicate internal and share documents in the hospital. We set up Wi-Fi points, installed servers and educated technicians.
In August 2014, we traveled to Nkinga to extend the network and set up a PACS server and computers for reviewing x-ray pictures.

Goal
Our goal with this project was to implement GNU Health at the hospital in short time.
The system consists of one server, one spare server, a backup server and about 30 workstations spread out at the hospital. The project also included training of the hospital’s users and to educate technicians to manage the system and network with our remote support.

Challenges
undefinedWe planned to introduce the system in 10 days and expected to start using some basic modules. When the basic modules worked, the plan was to continue implementing more modules . In order to manage to deploy the system at Nkinga in the short time, a medicine manager and an economist from the hospital visited us in Östersund for two weeks to prepare the implementation.


Implementation
When the two personnel went back to the hospital they arranged training sessions for different personnel groups and was a cornerstone for the implementation of the project.
During the first day of using GNU Health, it was discovered where it did not work as it should. For example, it became a bottleneck in the front desk where patients ensign themselves. In the first three days, in parallel with GNU Health, the hospital used paper. In the evening, the data on paper were
fed into the system.
Over the next few days, we moved around the hospital and instructed staff how to use the system. Not everyone was used to computer so it took some time. Everyone in the hospital has been very helpful and we worked up to 16 hours every day.

Afterword
In the first few days after we got home, the hospital contacted us daily about issues that arose and together we solved them. For every week that passed, the problems decreased. After 4 weeks of running GNU Health everything run smoothly. We have weekly telephone meeting to discuss
various issues. At the hospital they have worked very intensively with the training of staff and to optimize the flow. The understanding of the benefits of the hospital system is increasing all the time. The preparation of implementing GNU Health took us approximate one year.

Summary
Examples of work done during ten days:

  • Expanded computer network
  • Installed 25 new computers
  • Assembled and installed 3 servers
  • Training of users
  • Training of Technicians
  • Installed a number of routers and switches
  • During 10 days we (seven people) worked at total 820 hours .

For the implementation of GNU Health, we have purchased hardware for about 8000 EUR sponsored by an aid organization. We shipped 25 used computers and network equipment that we received from different companies.
After 2 months of using GNU Health, 2083 patients was enrolled in the system, 1873 appointments performed, 80 users worked in the system, 1600 invoices print, etc.

GNU Health has been running since November 2017 with only minor disturbance.

Pictures from Mike & Ulf blog (https://nkingahospital2017.wordpress.com/)

El Software Libre no se mancha

04 Saturday Nov 2017

Posted by Luis Falcon in GNU Health, Public Health

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

capitalismo, economía, Free Software Foundation, GNU Health, GNU solidario, justicia social, neoliberalismo, software libre

 

Existen dos tipos de miserables: las personas que sufren la miseria y aquellas que la generan.
La concentración del poder en el actual modelo socio-económico es tan injusta como insostenible. La privatización de la Salud Pública pervierte el derecho a una vida digna. La brecha social se profundiza, con ricos más ricos y pobres más pobres.
La codicia y el cortoplacismo del sistema están destruyendo la sociedad y el planeta. La contaminación medioambiental, la galopante deforestación y las granjas industriales son responsables del cambio climático que amenaza a las próximas generaciones.
Millones de animales son privados de su libertad y condenados al holocausto. Bebés arrancados del lecho materno destinados al matadero o encarcelados de por vida en mega granjas industriales en condiciones deplorables. Especismo y antropocentrismo inútil y despiadado, responsable de enfermedades cardiovasculares, cáncer, resistencia antibiótica y cambio climático.
Las corporaciones y sus gobiernos han encontrado herramientas formidables para el adoctrinamiento y vigilancia de masas. Similar a los medios de comunicación tradicionales, pero con métodos de control mucho más sofisticados que anestesian, hipnotizan y anulan el pensamiento crítico de los individuos.
Es imperativo retomar el control de nuestra libertad y dignidad, como individuos y como sociedad. La educación y el activismo social son clave para restaurarlos, y el Software Libre nos ofrece una magnífica vía para llevarlo a cabo.

El Software Libre representa lo contrario al modelo neoliberal. Entre sus fines está desarrollar comunidades, generar conocimiento y compartir recursos. Pero si queremos tener éxito, debemos afrontar y abrir un espacio para la discusión sobre las amenazas y riesgos existentes dentro y fuera de la comunidad.

En los últimos años hay un intento de desprestigiar el movimiento de Software Libre, principalmente por dos actores: La corporación del software propietario y núcleos de desarrolladores sin ética. Que la corporación y el software propietario intente dañar al Software Libre está dentro de lo esperado. Lo que requiere especial atención es el efecto deletéreo ocasionado por especuladores inescrupulosos infiltrados en la comunidad. El factor común de ambos actores es una lectura egoísta y retorcida de la libertad.
Según Richard Stallman, para que un proyecto sea Software Libre debe cumplir las cuatro libertades. Libertad para usar, estudiar, distribuir y mejorar el código. Estas “cuatro libertades” invitan a la colaboración y a construir comunidades alrededor del proyecto.
En el Software libre prevalece el sentido de libertad colectiva . La esfera colectiva tiene prioridad sobre la esfera individual. Por supuesto, el escenario ideal es que ambas libertades coexistan y se retroalimenten. Cuando la libertad individual coarta o anula la libertad colectiva, entonces no es Software Libre, aunque cumpla las cuatro libertades.

La laxitud del Software Libre está concebida para potenciar el espíritu comunitario y colaborativo. Desgraciadamente, esta flexibilidad ha permitido que se infiltren individuos y empresas miserables. Estos impostores tienen por objetivo engañar y apresar a la comunidad con sus malévolos cantos de sirena (Stallman lo denomina “Free bait” o “el anzuelo de lalibertad”).

Por ejemplo, hay quienes que, con nocturnidad y alevosía, sin previo aviso ni argumentos, se apropian, copian o bifurcan un proyecto de software libre activo. No han roto ninguna de las cuatro libertades, pero sus acciones los convierten en unos miserables que perjudican y traicionan a la comunidad.
A esos individuos les pido que mantengan sus sucias manos fuera de la comunidad, porque el Software Libre no se mancha.
La filosofía del Software Libre tiene mucho más de Libre que de Software. Cuando pensemos sobre Software Libre, pensemos en “Software que ofrece Libertad”. El software sólo es el medio para alcanzar la libertad.
En lo personal, adopté la filosofía del Software Libre como estudiante de ingeniería informática a principio de los años noventa. Actualmente, pasados veinticinco años, el Software Libre me ha permitido participar en muchos proyectos sociales y concretar principios de Medicina Social en instituciones de salud alrededor del mundo con el proyecto GNU Health.
Necesitamos avanzar, y para ello es fundamental que losgobiernos, organizaciones multilaterales y ONGs adopten el Software Libre. Las administraciones públicas que usan software privativo entran en una contradicción. Un bien público nuncapuede estar en manos privadas. Pidamos a los partidos políticos que incluyan el Software Libre en la administración pública, y podremos ver su compromiso social.
El Software Libre enseña, sana y hacepueblos soberanos. Permite generar un modelo económico sostenible, donde personas y empresas pueden colaborar con sus servicios, generando un medio digno y ético de vida. Hoy no hay ningún motivo para usar software privativo.
Cada línea de Software Libre codifica comunidad, democracia y dignidad. Codifica justicia social y un futuro mejor para las próximas generaciones y nuestro planeta.
Es tu elección.

GNU Health en La Universidad de Ciencias Médicas en Matanzas

30 Tuesday May 2017

Posted by Luis Falcon in GNU Health, GNU solidario

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Cuba, GNU Health, salud, Salud Pública, software libre

Queridos amigos.
Les copio la noticia del blog de GNU Solidario sobre mi participación en el Evento Nacional de Salud, que tuvo lugar en mayo de este año en La Universidad de Ciencias Médicas, Matanzas, Cuba. 
Ha sido un verdadero honor, y estoy encantado de haber participado en una conferencia de altísimo valor humano y científico.
Gracias a todos los amigos cubanos por su hospitalidad y por hacer que Cuba haya sido mi casa por esa semana. Seguro que repito !

GNU Health en Evento Nacional de Salud – Cuba –

Queremos agradecer a la Dirección de Salud Pública de Cuba y UIC por invitar al Dr. Luis Falcon al Evento Nacional de Salud el 25-26 Mayo en la Universidad de Ciencias Médicas en la Matanzas (Cuba).

OPENSym 2016

13 Wednesday Jul 2016

Posted by Luis Falcon in events, GNU Health

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

#socialmedicine, Berlin, BigData, freesoftware, GNU Health, GNU Health, gnusolidario, OPENSYM

GNU Health will be at OPENSym 2016. 
Luis Falcón will be presenting the latest news about GNU Health in the upcoming Conference and Community for Open Collaboration – OPENSym 2016. The 12th International Symposium on Open Collaboration, will take place in Berlin, Germany, on August 17-19.
Please, check out the program and we hope to see you in Berlin !

GNU Health 3.0 is out !

11 Monday Jan 2016

Posted by Luis Falcon in GNU Health, HMIS

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

#socialmedicine, ehealth, FHIR HL7, freesoftware, GNU Health, GNU Health, GNU Pootle, HMIS, ICD10, ICD9 OMS, tryton, webclient

Dear all:

After one year of work, I am vey happy and proud to announce the release
of GNU Health 3.0 series !

The following are some of the new features:

* Tryton 3.8 compatibility and responsive web client.
* Multiple person names, compliant with FHIR HL7, and flexible
  person name formats
* Automatic inclusion of medicament history from the prescription
* History of a person socioeconomic assessments
* Link to patient health conditions
* Health conditions now visible from patient main page
* Any person can be mapped to an internal user, not only the health
  professionals
* Add person biological sex and gender properties.
* Check all evaluations related to a person specific healh condition
* Easy change a patient appointment status from the tree view (checked
  in, no show, … )
* Automatic computing of a patient evaluation waiting time
* Hospitalization and outpatient discharge reason
* Merge chronic with followups evaluations. Merge ambulatory with
  outpatient evaluations
* Optimize CAGE (Alcoholism status assessment) view
* Enhanced Crypto plugin and module
* Create / see all the evaluations within a hospitalization
* Health center and hospitalization meals management
* Improved surgery module (surgery team, supplies, status, wound
  class, post-op dx, reservation workflow)
* Health services reporting
* Automatic prescription concentration, form and route based on the med
* Enhanced functionality in patient evaluation.
* Improved reporting
* Include / Update unitests ( Thanks Cedric !)
* Improved ergonomics for patient conditions and history.
* Patient protheses and amputation history ( Thanks Lao team !)
* Automatic inclusion of prescription lines in Service document
* Updated disease groups (thanks Chris Zimmerman !)
* Improve patient clinical history report
* New installer gnuhealth-setup tool
* Improved gnuhealth-control center
* Installation of language packs in one single instruction.

* Many other additions and community contributions …

New Modules :

* WHO ICD9 Volume 3 (procedural codes) (in addition to ICD10-PCS and
  ICPM) .( Thanks Min of Health of Morelos, Mexico !)
* Ophthalmology module ( thanks Sivadas !)
* Functioning and Disability module [1]

Translation portal moves to Pootle :

Since GNU Health 3.0, the main translation portal is at GNU Pootle server [2]

The following languages have been requested, and they are now included.

* Arabic
* Chinese (China)
* English (United Kingdom)
* French
* German (Austria)
* Greek
* Italian
* Japanese
* Kannada
* Lao
* Portuguese (Brazil)
* Spanish (Argentina)
* Spanish (Ecuador)
* Spanish (Mexico)
* Spanish (Peru)
* Spanish (Spain)

Some of them are still in the process of migrating the translation files from Transifex to the GNU Pootle server. It will take a bit until everything is in place. Of course, you can update your server translation packs at anytime,  using the getlang command of gnuhealth-control program.

There is a new mailing list (health-i18n) dedicated to the localization and translation of GNU Health[3]

During the upcoming weeks we’ll be updating the documentation, improving the demo database, as well as working on the translations.

Of course, we’ll be fixing any bugs you will find in this new release 🙂

Many, many thanks to all of you who have contributed to this release, in any way!

All the best,

1.-https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Classification_of_Functioning,_Disability_and_Health
2.- https://chapters.gnu.org/projects/health/
3.- https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/health-i18n
4.- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ICD-9-CM_Volume_3

Luis Falcón

GNU Health: Winner Premios Software Libre PortalProgramas 2015

19 Thursday Nov 2015

Posted by Luis Falcon in events, GNU Health

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

#socialmedicine, freesoftware, GNU Health, GNU Health, PortalProgramas, Premios Portal Programas

GNU Health was awarded 2015 Most Revolutionary Free Software by Premios PortalProgramas.
Thank you so much to PortalProgramas, the judges and the Free Software Community !
These are the winners:

Image

IWEEE 2015 Speakers

14 Friday Aug 2015

Tags

free software, fsf, gnu, GNU Health, GNU solidario, Hospital Information System, interoperability, IWEEE, Las Palmas, medical informatics, Public Health, richard stallman, Social Medicine, tryton

http://www.iweee.org/2015-las_palmas/speakers.html

Posted by Luis Falcon | Filed under events, GNU Health, GNU solidario

≈ Leave a comment

Call for Papers IWEEE 2015 : Social Medicine – People before Patients –

06 Monday Jul 2015

Posted by Luis Falcon in events, GNU Health, GNU solidario

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

#socialmedicine, free software, GNU Health, GNU Health, GNU solidario, healthcare, IWEEE, iweee2015, patients, Public Health, Salud Pública

The International Workshop on e-Health in Emerging Economies (IWEEE) is an annual conference for Free (Freedom) Software in Healthcare and Social Medicine advocates.

The workshop promotes Free Software as an effective and ethical solution to provide universality and equity in health care.

This year the theme of IWEEE is “People before Patients”. We will put the attention on health promotion and disease prevention. 

Share your government experiences and ideas, such as how your government is improving Public Health with Free Software, or personal health devices using open hardware.
IWEEE is a non-profit event organized by GNU SOLIDARIO.
If you are interested to participate, please submit your presentation at: papers@iweee.org

If you want to sponsor the event, please contact us via: sponsors@iweee.org

Please feel free to share this information with others people who may be interested.

*Deadline*

 If you wish to participate to the call for papers/posters :

*Abstract* *submission*: no later than 1st of August 2015

Paper and posters submission guidelines
We hope to see you in Las Palmas !
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