Chronicling the patient journey: Co-creating value with digital health ecosystems


Autoria(s): Black, Alofi Shane; Sahama, Tony
Data(s)

2016

Resumo

With the introduction of the PCEHR (Personally Controlled Electronic Health Record), the Australian public is being asked to accept greater responsibility for the management of their health information. However, the implementation of the PCEHR has occasioned poor adoption rates underscored by criticism from stakeholders with concerns about transparency, accountability, privacy, confidentiality, governance, and limited capabilities. This study adopts an ethnographic lens to observe how information is created and used during the patient journey and the social factors impacting on the adoption of the PCEHR at the micro-level in order to develop a conceptual model that will encourage the sharing of patient information within the cycle of care. Objective: This study aims to firstly, establish a basic understanding of healthcare professional attitudes toward a national platform for sharing patient summary information in the form of a PCEHR. Secondly, the studies aims to map the flow of patient related information as it traverses a patient’s personal cycle of care. Thus, an ethnographic approach was used to bring a “real world” lens to information flow in a series of case studies in the Australian healthcare system to discover themes and issues that are important from the patient’s perspective. Design: Qualitative study utilising ethnographic case studies. Setting: Case studies were conducted at primary and allied healthcare professionals located in Brisbane Queensland between October 2013 and July 2014. Results: In the first dimension, it was identified that healthcare professionals’ concerns about trust and medico-legal issues related to patient control and information quality, and the lack of clinical value available with the PCEHR emerged as significant barriers to use. The second dimension of the study which attempted to map patient information flow identified information quality issues, clinical workflow inefficiencies and interoperability misconceptions resulting in duplication of effort, unnecessary manual processes, data quality and integrity issues and an over reliance on the understanding and communication skills of the patient. Conclusion: Opportunities for process efficiencies, improved data quality and increased patient safety emerge with the adoption of an appropriate information sharing platform. More importantly, large scale eHealth initiatives must be aligned with the value proposition of individual stakeholders in order to achieve widespread adoption. Leveraging an Australian national eHealth infrastructure and the PCEHR we offer a practical example of a service driven digital ecosystem suitable for co-creating value in healthcare.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/90062/

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/90062/1/BlackandSahamaHIKM2016_InPress.pdf

Black, Alofi Shane & Sahama, Tony (2016) Chronicling the patient journey: Co-creating value with digital health ecosystems. In The 9th Australasian Workshop on Health Informatics and Knowledge Management (HIKM 2016), 2-5 February 2016, Australian National University, Canberra, ACT.

Direitos

Copyright 2015 The Author(s)

Fonte

School of Electrical Engineering & Computer Science; Science & Engineering Faculty

Palavras-Chave #080505 Web Technologies (excl. Web Search) #080612 Interorganisational Information Systems and Web Services #eHaaS #eHealth #Service-Dominant Logic #Value co-creation #eHealth-as-a-Service #Cloud Computing #Personal Health Records #Patient Journey
Tipo

Conference Paper