DHIS - meaning and definition. What is DHIS
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What (who) is DHIS - definition

HEALTH MANAGEMENT SOFTWARE PLATFORM
District Health Information System; DHIS

DHIS         
Distributed Heterogeneous Information Systems
DHIS         
The District Health Information Software (DHIS) is used in more than 60 countries around the world. DHIS is an open source software platform for reporting, analysis and dissemination of data for all health programs, developed by the Health Information Systems Programme (HISP). The core development activities of the DHIS 2 platform (see note on releases and versions further down) are coordinated by the Department of Informatics at the University of Oslo, and supported by NORAD, PEPFAR, The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, UNICEF and the University of Oslo.
DHI (company)         
SOFTWARE AND CONSULTING COMPANY
Litpack; DHI Water & Environment; LITPACK; DHI Group
DHI is an international water software development and engineering consultancy firm with headquarters in Denmark. The not-for-profit organisation addresses all challenges in water environments through consultancy services, MIKE Powered by DHI water modelling software, business applications, data portals and operational services.

Wikipedia

DHIS2

DHIS2 (also spelled DHIS 2, formerly District Health Information Software) is a free and open-source software platform for the collection, reporting, analysis and dissemination of aggregate and individual-level data.

The most common use of DHIS2 is for health data, where it can be implemented for individual health programs and/or as a national-scale Health Management Information System (HMIS). As of the end of 2022, DHIS2 was in use by Ministries of Health in more than 75 low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), with 69 countries using DHIS2 at national scale. Beyond health, DHIS2 is used in sectors such as education, supply chain and logistics, water and sanitation, nutrition and food security, agriculture and land management, and e-governance, among others. DHIS2 is officially recognized as a Digital Public Good.

Development of the core DHIS2 software is coordinated by the HISP Centre at the University of Oslo (formerly the Health Information Systems Programme), where it is housed within the Department of Informatics. The DHIS2 project is supported financially by a coalition of global partners, including Norad; PEPFAR; The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria; UNICEF; Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance; the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation; and the University of Oslo. The HISP Centre is an official Collaborating Centre of the World Health Organization.