A Case Analysis of INFOMED: The Cuban National Health Care Telecommunications Network and Portal
Open Access
- 27 January 2006
- journal article
- Published by JMIR Publications Inc. in Journal of Medical Internet Research
- Vol. 8 (1) , e1
- https://doi.org/10.2196/jmir.8.1.e1
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The Internet and telecommunications technologies contribute to national health care system infrastructures and extend global health care services markets. The Cuban national health care system offers a model to show how a national information portal can contribute to system integration, including research, education, and service delivery as well as international trade in products and services. OBJECTIVE: The objectives of this paper are (1) to present the context of the Cuban national health care system since the revolution in 1959, (2) to identify virtual institutional infrastructures of the system associated with the Cuban National Health Care Telecommunications Network and Portal (INFOMED), and (3) to show how they contribute to Cuban trade in international health care service markets. METHODS: Qualitative case research methods were used to identify the integrated virtual infrastructure of INFOMED and to show how it reflects socialist ideology. Virtual institutional infrastructures include electronic medical and information services and the structure of national networks linking such services. RESULTS: Analysis of INFOMED infrastructures shows integration of health care information, research, and education as well as the interface between Cuban national information networks and the global Internet. System control mechanisms include horizontal integration and coordination through virtual institutions linked through INFOMED, and vertical control through the Ministry of Public Health and the government hierarchy. Telecommunications technology serves as a foundation for a dual market structure differentiating domestic services from international trade. CONCLUSIONS: INFOMED is a model of interest for integrating health care information, research, education, and services. The virtual infrastructures linked through INFOMED support the diffusion of Cuban health care products and services in global markets. Transferability of this model is contingent upon ideology and interpretation of values such as individual intellectual property and confidentiality of individual health information. Future research should focus on examination of these issues and their consequences for global markets in health care. [J Med Internet Res 2006;8(1):e1]Keywords
This publication has 34 references indexed in Scilit:
- Service-Oriented ScienceScience, 2005
- Effect of democracy on health: ecological studyBMJ, 2004
- Lessons from health during the transition from communismBMJ, 2004
- Effect of restricted freedom on health in ChinaBMJ, 2004
- Is democracy good for people's health? A South African perspectiveBMJ, 2004
- THE GLOBALIZATION OF PRIVATE KNOWLEDGE GOODS AND THE PRIVATIZATION OF GLOBAL PUBLIC GOODSJournal of International Economic Law, 2004
- Systems thinking and the disclosure of a technological society: some philosophical reflectionsBehavioral Science, 2003
- Internet Infrastructures and Health Care Systems: a Qualitative Comparative Analysis on Networks and Markets in the British National Health Service and Kaiser PermanenteJournal of Medical Internet Research, 2002
- How exactly do politics play a part in determining health? New perspectives on an age old issueJournal of Epidemiology and Community Health, 2002
- The Global Health Network Supercourse: Epidemiology, the Internet, and Global HealthTelemedicine Journal, 1999