Organizational and Physician Perspectives about Facilitating Handheld Computer Use in Clinical Practice: Results of a Cross-Site Qualitative Study

To describe strategies that organizations select to support physicians' use of handheld computers (HHCs) in clinical practice and to explore issues about facilitating HHC use. A multidisciplinary team used focus groups and interviews with clinical, administrative, and information technology (IT...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association : JAMIA 2005-09, Vol.12 (5), p.568-575
Hauptverfasser: McAlearney, Ann Scheck, Schweikhart, Sharon B., Medow, Mitchell A.
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container_title Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association : JAMIA
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creator McAlearney, Ann Scheck
Schweikhart, Sharon B.
Medow, Mitchell A.
description To describe strategies that organizations select to support physicians' use of handheld computers (HHCs) in clinical practice and to explore issues about facilitating HHC use. A multidisciplinary team used focus groups and interviews with clinical, administrative, and information technology (IT) staff to gather data from 161 informants at seven sites. Transcripts were coded using a combination of deductive and inductive approaches to both answer research questions and identify patterns and themes that emerged in the data. Answers to questions about strategies for HHC support and themes about (1) how to facilitate physician adoption and use and (2) organizational concerns. Three main organizational strategies for HHC support were characterized among sites: (1) active support for broad-based use, (2) active support for niche use, and (3) basic support for individual physician users. Three high-level themes emerged around how to best facilitate physician adoption and use of HHCs: (1) improving usability and usefulness, (2) promoting HHCs and device use, and (3) providing training and support. However, four major themes also emerged related to organizations' concerns about HHC use: (1) security-related concerns, (2) economic concerns, (3) technical concerns, and (4) strategic concerns. An organizational approach to HHC support that involves individualized attention to existing and potential physician users rather than one-size-fits-all, organization-wide implementation efforts was an important facilitator promoting physician use of HHCs. Health care organizations interested in supporting HHC use must consider issues related to security, economics, and IT strategy that may not be prominent concerns for physician users.
doi_str_mv 10.1197/jamia.M1816
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subjects Attitude of Health Personnel
Attitude to Computers
Computers, Handheld - utilization
Focus Groups
Humans
Interviews as Topic
Organizational Case Studies
Organizational Culture
Organizational Innovation
Original Investigations
Physicians
Qualitative Research
title Organizational and Physician Perspectives about Facilitating Handheld Computer Use in Clinical Practice: Results of a Cross-Site Qualitative Study
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