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Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Public Health and Surveillance

Date Submitted: Oct 14, 2025
Date Accepted: Apr 1, 2026

The final, peer-reviewed published version of this preprint can be found here:

Digital Health Center App for Community and National Malaria Surveillance in Cambodia: Implementation Case Study

Pengby N, Rekol H, Thyda E, Rith R, Kimleng S, Rattana Y, Vunsokserey O, Vanna H, Pumeoung C, Ringwald P, Maude RJ, White L, Sovannaroth S

Digital Health Center App for Community and National Malaria Surveillance in Cambodia: Implementation Case Study

JMIR Public Health Surveill 2026;12:e85881

DOI: 10.2196/85881

PMID: 42284598

Community and National Malaria Surveillance: Implementation Case Study of a Health Center Application in Driving Evidence-based Responses

  • Ngor Pengby; 
  • Huy Rekol; 
  • Eng Thyda; 
  • Ry Rith; 
  • Sok Kimleng; 
  • Yoem Rattana; 
  • Ou Vunsokserey; 
  • Hem Vanna; 
  • Chang Pumeoung; 
  • Pascal Ringwald; 
  • Richard J Maude; 
  • Lisa White; 
  • Siv Sovannaroth

ABSTRACT

Background:

Cambodia is targeting malaria elimination, requiring robust surveillance systems to ensure rapid case detection, classification and response. In 2017, the national malaria program introduced an Android-based mobile health center app to all malaria-endemic health centers. The app delivers real-time, geo-located, case-based reporting at the primary care level, and is integrated with a web-based Malaria Information System which uploads consolidated data and analytics to the app to drive programmatic responses.

Objective:

To describe the health center app functionality and evaluate its performance and impact on malaria surveillance, including its role in supporting elimination activities.

Methods:

The development and implementation of the health center app are described. The functionality of the system was evaluated using system-generated metadata, national surveillance data, a user experience survey conducted across 761 health centers in 21 provinces and an in-depth structured survey including 9 health centers across 3 provinces. Key metrics included technical performance, data completeness and timeliness, analytical depth and contribution to surveillance targets and user-reported app usability.

Results:

The health center app is technically robust with rapid loading times and resilient data transmission under low-bandwidth conditions. Real-time dashboards enable case management, performance tracking, risk stratification and intervention monitoring. In 2024, data completeness was high at 99% (89/90) of entries. From 1st January to 31st July 2025, 69 malaria cases were reported nationally; 23 locally acquired, 7 domestically imported and 39 internationally imported. Among the 69 cases, 95.7% (66/69) were notified and classified within 1 day. Reactive case detection was completed within 3 days for 21 of 21 eligible cases. Of 19 eligible foci, a foci response was initiated within 7 days for 16, indicating strong surveillance performance. The user experience survey showed that 71.1% (541/761) of health centers were satisfied or very satisfied with the app, 90.1% (686/761) found that technical issues were rare or absent and 71.1% (541/761) thought that system speed was fast or very fast. Although 44.3% (337/761) of health centers confirmed that they needed regular training on the app, 91.7% (698/761) found navigating the app easy or very easy. The main challenges remained limited internet connectivity, transport to remote areas and interruptions in electricity supply. In-depth surveys revealed high uptake, user confidence in reporting procedures and consistent data use, although gaps in local data analysis capacity were identified.

Conclusions:

The Cambodian health center app strengthened malaria surveillance by enabling timely, complete and structured reporting at the point of care. The system supports real-time analysis, targeted response and decentralized decision-making. Further investment in digital literacy, system integration and predictive analytics will enhance pre-elimination activities and enable seamless transition to post-elimination surveillance for preventing the re-establishment of malaria transmission in Cambodia. Clinical Trial: Not applicable


 Citation

Please cite as:

Pengby N, Rekol H, Thyda E, Rith R, Kimleng S, Rattana Y, Vunsokserey O, Vanna H, Pumeoung C, Ringwald P, Maude RJ, White L, Sovannaroth S

Digital Health Center App for Community and National Malaria Surveillance in Cambodia: Implementation Case Study

JMIR Public Health Surveill 2026;12:e85881

DOI: 10.2196/85881

PMID: 42284598

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© The authors. All rights reserved. This is a privileged document currently under peer-review/community review (or an accepted/rejected manuscript). Authors have provided JMIR Publications with an exclusive license to publish this preprint on it's website for review and ahead-of-print citation purposes only. While the final peer-reviewed paper may be licensed under a cc-by license on publication, at this stage authors and publisher expressively prohibit redistribution of this draft paper other than for review purposes.