Making sense of health information technology implementation: A qualitative study protocol

被引:14
作者
Kitzmiller, Rebecca R. [1 ]
Anderson, Ruth A. [1 ]
McDaniel, Reuben R., Jr. [2 ]
机构
[1] Duke Univ, Sch Nursing, Durham, NC 27502 USA
[2] Univ Texas Austin, McCombs Sch Business, Dept Management Sci & Informat Syst, Austin, TX 78712 USA
来源
IMPLEMENTATION SCIENCE | 2010年 / 5卷
关键词
PHYSICIAN ORDER ENTRY; UNINTENDED CONSEQUENCES; PSYCHOLOGICAL SAFETY; STRATEGIC CHANGE; SENSEMAKING; SYSTEMS; TEAM; CARE; ORGANIZATIONS; IMPROVEMENT;
D O I
10.1186/1748-5908-5-95
中图分类号
R19 [保健组织与事业(卫生事业管理)];
学科分类号
摘要
Background: Implementing new practices, such as health information technology (HIT), is often difficult due to the disruption of the highly coordinated, interdependent processes (e. g., information exchange, communication, relationships) of providing care in hospitals. Thus, HIT implementation may occur slowly as staff members observe and make sense of unexpected disruptions in care. As a critical organizational function, sensemaking, defined as the social process of searching for answers and meaning which drive action, leads to unified understanding, learning, and effective problem solving - strategies that studies have linked to successful change. Project teamwork is a change strategy increasingly used by hospitals that facilitates sensemaking by providing a formal mechanism for team members to share ideas, construct the meaning of events, and take next actions. Methods: In this longitudinal case study, we aim to examine project teams' sensemaking and action as the team prepares to implement new information technology in a tiertiary care hospital. Based on management and healthcare literature on HIT implementation and project teamwork, we chose sensemaking as an alternative to traditional models for understanding organizational change and teamwork. Our methods choices are derived from this conceptual framework. Data on project team interactions will be prospectively collected through direct observation and organizational document review. Through qualitative methods, we will identify sensemaking patterns and explore variation in sensemaking across teams. Participant demographics will be used to explore variation in sensemaking patterns. Discussion: Outcomes of this research will be new knowledge about sensemaking patterns of project teams, such as: the antecedents and consequences of the ongoing, evolutionary, social process of implementing HIT; the internal and external factors that influence the project team, including team composition, team member interaction, and interaction between the project team and the larger organization; the ways in which internal and external factors influence project team processes; and the ways in which project team processes facilitate team task accomplishment. These findings will lead to new methods of implementing HIT in hospitals.
引用
收藏
页数:8
相关论文
共 61 条
[1]  
Aarts J, 2006, METHOD INFORM MED, V45, P53
[2]  
Albolino S., 2007, COGN TECHNOL WORK, V9, P131, DOI DOI 10.1007/S10111-006-0057-5
[3]   Nurse assistant mental models, sensemaking, care actions, and consequences for nursing home residents [J].
Anderson, RA ;
Ammarell, N ;
Bailey, D ;
Colón-Emeric, C ;
Corazzini, KN ;
Lillie, M ;
Piven, MLS ;
Utley-Smith, Q ;
McDaniel, RR .
QUALITATIVE HEALTH RESEARCH, 2005, 15 (08) :1006-1021
[4]   Nursing homes as complex adaptive systems - Relationship between management practice and resident outcomes [J].
Anderson, RA ;
Issel, LM ;
McDaniel, RR .
NURSING RESEARCH, 2003, 52 (01) :12-21
[5]   Sensemaking of change in the managed care era: a case of hospital-based nurses [J].
Apker, J .
JOURNAL OF ORGANIZATIONAL CHANGE MANAGEMENT, 2004, 17 (02) :211-227
[6]  
Ash Joan S, 2006, AMIA Annu Symp Proc, P11
[7]   Some unintended consequences of information technology in health care: The nature of patient care information system-related errors [J].
Ash, JS ;
Berg, M ;
Coiera, E .
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL INFORMATICS ASSOCIATION, 2004, 11 (02) :104-112
[8]  
ASH JS, 2005, MEDINFO, V11, P1013
[9]  
Ashmos DP, 1998, HEALTH CARE MANAGE R, V23, P7
[10]   From intended strategies to unintended outcomes: The impact of change recipient sensemaking [J].
Balogun, J ;
Johnson, G .
ORGANIZATION STUDIES, 2005, 26 (11) :1573-1601