Title :
Value, Participation and Quality of Electronic Health Records in the Netherlands
Author :
Spil, T.A.M. ; Katsma, Christiaan P. ; Stegwee, Robert A. ; Albers, Ernst F. ; Freriks, Arne ; Ligt, Edwin
Author_Institution :
Univ. of Twente, Enschede, Netherlands
Abstract :
Growing cost of health care, the gradual reorganization of health care on a free-market basis and patients evolving into health care consumers all prompt hospitals to gain competitive advantage by improving efficiency, quality of care, and customer friendliness. An electronic health record system (EHR) is one of the tools to achieve these goals. Hospitals are nevertheless lagging behind industry in implementing IT systems to support their core business processes. Eighteen case studies were conducted among Dutch hospitals to examine the EHR system implementation. Through seventy three interviews with key stakeholders, the relation between perceived value of the EHR, the degree of participation in the implementation process, and the resulting quality of EHR systems was investigated. The value that end users expect is not achieved within Dutch hospitals. It was found that no hospital had so far reached third generation EHR functionality, even though several hospitals are actively pursuing it. Innovation with respect to EHR systems in hospitals is limited because of a lack of capabilities, not because of a lack of participation. Extensive and ill-targeted end user involvement tends to delay decision making and exacerbates the mismatch between implementation goals and results. Quality issues focus on information quality in terms of completeness and system quality in terms of reliability. This study contributes in combining participation models with the technology acceptance model and the IS success models. Electronic Health Records can be evaluated with this combination and a prescriptive analysis has lead to practical advice to the Dutch Ministry of Health.
Keywords :
health care; medical information systems; Netherlands; electronic health records; free-market basis; health care consumers; health record system; ill-targeted end; information quality; key stakeholders; quality issues; system quality; technology acceptance model; Costs; Decision making; Decision support systems; Delay; Government; Hospitals; Industrial relations; Information systems; Medical services; Technological innovation;
Conference_Titel :
System Sciences (HICSS), 2010 43rd Hawaii International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Honolulu, HI
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-5509-6
Electronic_ISBN :
1530-1605
DOI :
10.1109/HICSS.2010.433