A Deterrence Approach to Regulate Nurses’ Compliance with Electronic Medical Records Privacy Policy

Hospitals have become increasingly aware that electronic medical records (EMR) may bring about tangible/intangible benefits to managing institutions, including reduced medical errors, improved quality-of-care, curtailed costs, and allowed access to patient information by healthcare professionals reg...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of medical systems 2017-12, Vol.41 (12), p.198-10, Article 198
Hauptverfasser: Kuo, Kuang-Ming, Talley, Paul C., Hung, Ming-Chien, Chen, Yen-Liang
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container_issue 12
container_start_page 198
container_title Journal of medical systems
container_volume 41
creator Kuo, Kuang-Ming
Talley, Paul C.
Hung, Ming-Chien
Chen, Yen-Liang
description Hospitals have become increasingly aware that electronic medical records (EMR) may bring about tangible/intangible benefits to managing institutions, including reduced medical errors, improved quality-of-care, curtailed costs, and allowed access to patient information by healthcare professionals regardless of limitations. However, increased dependence on EMR has led to a corresponding increase in the influence of EMR breaches. Such incursions, which have been significantly facilitated by the introduction of mobile devices for accessing EMR, may induce tangible/intangible damage to both hospitals and concerned individuals. The purpose of this study was to explore factors which may tend to inhibit nurses’ intentions to violate privacy policy concerning EMR based upon the deterrence theory perspective. Utilizing survey methodology, 262 responses were analyzed via structural equation modeling. Results revealed that punishment certainty, detection certainty, and subjective norm would most certainly and significantly reduce nurses’ intentions to violate established EMR privacy policy. With these findings, recommendations for health administrators in planning and designing effective strategies which may potentially inhibit nurses from violating EMR privacy policy are discussed.
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subjects Attitude of Health Personnel
Computer Security
Confidentiality - standards
Electronic devices
Electronic health records
Electronic Health Records - standards
Electronic medical records
Health care
Health Informatics
Health Sciences
Hospitals
Humans
Institutions
Medical personnel
Medical records
Medicine
Medicine & Public Health
Nurses
Nurses - psychology
Privacy
Punishment
Risk Assessment
Social Norms
Statistics for Life Sciences
Systems-Level Quality Improvement
title A Deterrence Approach to Regulate Nurses’ Compliance with Electronic Medical Records Privacy Policy
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