Doctors Do Too Little Technology: A Longitudinal Field Study of an Electronic Healthcare System Implementation
成果类型:
Article
署名作者:
Venkatesh, Viswanath; Zhang, Xiaojun; Sykes, Tracy A.
署名单位:
University of Arkansas System; University of Arkansas Fayetteville; Hong Kong University of Science & Technology
刊物名称:
INFORMATION SYSTEMS RESEARCH
ISSN/ISSBN:
1047-7047
DOI:
10.1287/isre.1110.0383
发表日期:
2011
页码:
523-546
关键词:
information-technology
NETWORK PERSPECTIVE
social networks
performance
MODEL
satisfaction
physicians
acceptance
COMMITMENT
centrality
摘要:
With the strong ongoing push toward investment in and deployment of electronic healthcare (e-healthcare) systems, understanding the factors that drive the use of such systems and the consequences of using such systems is of scientific and practical significance. Elaborate training in new e-healthcare systems is not a luxury that is typically available to healthcare professionals-i.e., doctors, paraprofessionals (e.g., nurses) and administrative personnel-because of the 24 x 7 nature and criticality of operations of healthcare organizations, especially hospitals, thus making peer interactions and support a key driver of or barrier to such e-healthcare system use. Against this backdrop, using social networks as a theoretical lens, this paper presents a nomological network related to e-healthcare system use. A longitudinal study of an e-healthcare system implementation, with data gathered from doctors, paraprofessionals, administrative personnel, patients, and usage logs lent support to the hypotheses that: (1) ingroup and outgroup ties to doctors negatively affect use in all user groups; (2) ingroup and outgroup ties to paraprofessionals and administrative personnel positively affect use in both those groups, but have no effect on doctors' use; and (3) use contributes positively to patient satisfaction mediated by healthcare quality variables-i.e., technical quality, communication, interpersonal interactions, and time spent. This work contributes to the theory and practice related to the success of e-healthcare system use in particular, and information systems in general.
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