Collections from Oxford Open Digital Health
Oxford Open Digital Health is a fully Open Access and peer-reviewed journal publishing research on Digital Health Interventions, with a particular focus on Low and Middle-Income Countries. The journal aims to provide a high-impact outlet for research that adds to the evidence-base of DHIs used to strengthen health systems, and accelerate progress towards universal health coverage.
The journal offers collections that cover topics in the field of digital health. Explore recent collections below.
Explore Collections from Oxford Open Digital Health
Digital Health Interventions for Universal Health Coverage
Digital health and the digital transformation of health systems are an enabler and accelerator to achieving Universal Health Coverage (UHC) in low- and middle-income countries. This can help close equity gaps, enhance primary healthcare, and improve efficiency and health outcomes. However, the digital health landscape is characterized by fragmented initiatives and investments, insufficient political will, and inadequate governance of health data. Made in co-ordination with Transform Health, this collection showcases impacts of digital health interventions and approaches towards expanded healthcare access and improved health outcomes.
Foundational Architecture for National Digital Transformation
Worldwide, several governments are in the process of developing national digital health policies, governance, digital architecture and frameworks for standards and interoperability. To strengthen the capacity of all G20 countries and promote south-south learning, Oxford Open Digital Health highlights and showcases articles focused on conceptualization and implementation of foundational architecture for digital transformation.
Discover more from Oxford Open Digital Health
Oxford Open Digital Health is an Open Access journal that publishes methodologically rigorous evaluations, evidence reviews, study protocols and other policy-relevant research on Digital Health Interventions. Discover more from the journal: