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Poor implementa­tion of health info system cost lives: NGO

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CHENNAI: The poor implementa­tion of the Health Management Informatio­n System (HMIS 2.0) and tender irregulari­ties in implementi­ng the project has resulted in the loss of lives in the State, alleged Arappor Iyakkam, a city-based anti-graft organisati­on.

In a complaint to the Directorat­e of Vigilance and Anti-Corruption (DVAC), Jayaram Venkatesan, convenor of the organisati­on, said the tender for selection of a system integrator for Health Management Informatio­n System was floated in 2017 by the Tamil Nadu Medical Services Corporatio­n. But the tender was won as a single tender, which is a violation of the Tender Transparen­cy Act, 1998, and the orders of the Supreme Court.

The objective of the software is to make clinical data available for rapid interventi­ons in case of epidemics and or epidemiolo­gical study, and maintainin­g real-time data on human resources and inventory of infrastruc­ture and equipment.

“Until this date, there has been no output from the company, leading to heavy loss for the general public and frontline workers. The order for payment of Rs 4.5 crore by the Health Secretary 10 days before the election was a financial loss to the exchequer, as the claimed percentage of completion of software was entirely false,” Jayaram Venkatesan said.

The complaint also pointed out that there was a loss of several services such as patients’ integrated health record, informatio­n to doctors about patients’ health history, informatio­n of drugs and other infrastruc­ture, and others.

He urged the DVAC to immediatel­y register an FIR against public servants and directors of Oasys Cybernetic­s Pvt Ltd, apart from terminatin­g the tender and blacklisti­ng the firm.

The objective of the software is to make clinical data available for rapid interventi­ons in case of epidemics and or epidemiolo­gical study, and maintainin­g real-time data on human resources and inventory of infrastruc­ture and equipment

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