Just prior to February 2020, the Ministry had deployed a bowel screening system on the Salesforce platform as a part of its National Bowel Screening Programme (NBSP); those who are eligible can sign up to receive an at-home test in the mail which can detect common symptoms of bowel cancer. Patients sign up to receive the test via an online community portal built on Experience Cloud, where they enter relevant health history and background information. This data, along with test results, is stored in a profile-like record within Service Cloud, which the Ministry uses to follow up on cases, share results, and invite those who tested positive to participate in additional screening services like a colonoscopy, “a workflow that is pretty common across any contact tracing effort,” said Dreyer.
The Ministry team adapted its bowel screening system to develop the country’s contact tracing system, also on the Salesforce platform. It gives the team the modern, digital tools they need to support local health districts on a national scale without sacrificing their ability to pivot to more targeted models when called for given the level of complexity that has defined the COVID-19 pandemic. Here’s how it works:
Similar to the NBSP system, residents who think they might have COVID-19 can register with an online community portal built on Experience Cloud. They are prompted to fill out their background information and guided through a series of COVID-related questions (“Were you exposed to someone who is COVID-positive?” or “Do you have a cough? Fever?” for example) and invited to register for a COVID-19 test.
After test results are available, they are uploaded to the patient’s profile on the backend via Service Cloud. Automated workflow rules notify the patient that it’s time to log back in and get their results, as well as healthcare staff so they can follow up accordingly with any necessary quarantine or isolation orders. Healthcare officials can also collect the information they need to contact the next at-risk person, log their notes, and share updates with the Ministry in real time, bringing the power of the Federal government to each local health district.
Knowledge was layered, serving up helpful articles and FAQs healthcare employees might need when helping a patient. MuleSoft was also included in the core design, giving the platform the ability to integrate with third-party systems through APIs. Shield was also included, enabling the Ministry to add an additional layer of security, along with Sandbox Environments, giving the team a test environment which they use to experiment with different configurations, a capability that became especially critical in the design process as new information, strains, policies, etc. come to be. “We worked with our regional partners, co-designing a system that not only met the changing needs of frontline staff, but also included the type of security controls that are required of a national programme that is dealing with personal data,” said Dreyer.