10th International Congress on Information and Communication Technology in concurrent with ICT Excellence Awards (ICICT 2025) will be held at London, United Kingdom | February 18 - 21 2025.
Authors - Radford Burger, Olawande Daramola Abstract - Clinical Decision Support Systems (CDSS) have the potential to significantly improve healthcare quality in resource-limited settings (RLS). Despite evidence supporting the effectiveness of CDSS, their adoption and implementation rates remain low in RLS due to low levels of computer literacy among health workers, fragmented and unreliable infrastructure, and technical challenges. A thorough understanding of requirements is critical for the design of CDSS, which will be relevant to RLS. This paper explores the elicitation and prioritisation of requirements of a CDSS tailored to gait-related diseases in RLS. To do this, we conducted a qualitative literature analysis to identify potential requirements. After that, the requirements were presented to gait analysis experts for revision and prioritisation using the MoSCoW requirements prioritisation technique. The analysis of the results of the prioritisation process shows that for the functional requirements, 59.1% are fundamental and essential (Must Have), 36.3% are important but not fundamental (Should Have), 4.5% are negotiable requirements that are nice-to-have, but not important or fundamental (Could Have). All the non-functional requirements (100%) that pertain to usability and security were considered fundamental and essential (Must Have). This study provides a solid foundation for understanding the requirements of CDSS that are tailored to gait-related diseases in RLS. It also provides a guide for software developers and re-searchers on the design choices regarding the development of CDSS for RLS.