Factors that promote or inhibit the implementation of e-health systems: an explanatory systematic review
Factors that promote or inhibit the implementation of e-health systems: an explanatory systematic review
OBJECTIVE: To systematically review the literature on the implementation of e-health to identify: (i) barriers and facilitators to e-health implementation, and (ii) outstanding gaps in research on the subject.
METHODS: MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, PSYCINFO and the Cochrane Library were searched for reviews published between 1 January 1995 and 17 March 2009. Studies had to be systematic reviews, narrative reviews, qualitative metasyntheses or meta-ethnographies of e-health implementation. Abstracts and papers were double screened and data were extracted on country of origin; e-health domain; publication date; aims and methods; databases searched; inclusion and exclusion criteria and number of papers included. Data were analysed qualitatively using normalization process theory as an explanatory coding framework.
FINDINGS: Inclusion criteria were met by 37 papers; 20 had been published between 1995 and 2007 and 17 between 2008 and 2009. Methodological quality was poor: 19 papers did not specify the inclusion and exclusion criteria and 13 did not indicate the precise number of articles screened. The use of normalization process theory as a conceptual framework revealed that relatively little attention was paid to: (i) work directed at making sense of e-health systems, specifying their purposes and benefits, establishing their value to users and planning their implementation; (ii) factors promoting or inhibiting engagement and participation; (iii) effects on roles and responsibilities; (iv) risk management, and (v) ways in which implementation processes might be reconfigured by user-produced knowledge.
CONCLUSION: The published literature focused on organizational issues, neglecting the wider social framework that must be considered when introducing new technologies.
357-364
Mair, Frances S.
303709c7-028a-44b9-b6da-e14f2d834f2b
May, Carl
17697f8d-98f6-40d3-9cc0-022f04009ae4
O'Donnell, Catherine
2f00d597-7d38-438c-b5fc-45f1e0a21a1c
Finch, Tracy
b1916307-8516-4b70-8ba5-05d3310839de
Sullivan, Frank
54fec8ce-02e9-4aab-b2e6-c32e668458cd
Murray, Elizabeth
cb300780-9041-44af-9ae5-e13531eb23b8
1 May 2012
Mair, Frances S.
303709c7-028a-44b9-b6da-e14f2d834f2b
May, Carl
17697f8d-98f6-40d3-9cc0-022f04009ae4
O'Donnell, Catherine
2f00d597-7d38-438c-b5fc-45f1e0a21a1c
Finch, Tracy
b1916307-8516-4b70-8ba5-05d3310839de
Sullivan, Frank
54fec8ce-02e9-4aab-b2e6-c32e668458cd
Murray, Elizabeth
cb300780-9041-44af-9ae5-e13531eb23b8
Mair, Frances S., May, Carl, O'Donnell, Catherine, Finch, Tracy, Sullivan, Frank and Murray, Elizabeth
(2012)
Factors that promote or inhibit the implementation of e-health systems: an explanatory systematic review.
Bulletin of the World Health Organization, 90 (5), .
(doi:10.2471/BLT.11.099424).
(PMID:22589569)
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To systematically review the literature on the implementation of e-health to identify: (i) barriers and facilitators to e-health implementation, and (ii) outstanding gaps in research on the subject.
METHODS: MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, PSYCINFO and the Cochrane Library were searched for reviews published between 1 January 1995 and 17 March 2009. Studies had to be systematic reviews, narrative reviews, qualitative metasyntheses or meta-ethnographies of e-health implementation. Abstracts and papers were double screened and data were extracted on country of origin; e-health domain; publication date; aims and methods; databases searched; inclusion and exclusion criteria and number of papers included. Data were analysed qualitatively using normalization process theory as an explanatory coding framework.
FINDINGS: Inclusion criteria were met by 37 papers; 20 had been published between 1995 and 2007 and 17 between 2008 and 2009. Methodological quality was poor: 19 papers did not specify the inclusion and exclusion criteria and 13 did not indicate the precise number of articles screened. The use of normalization process theory as a conceptual framework revealed that relatively little attention was paid to: (i) work directed at making sense of e-health systems, specifying their purposes and benefits, establishing their value to users and planning their implementation; (ii) factors promoting or inhibiting engagement and participation; (iii) effects on roles and responsibilities; (iv) risk management, and (v) ways in which implementation processes might be reconfigured by user-produced knowledge.
CONCLUSION: The published literature focused on organizational issues, neglecting the wider social framework that must be considered when introducing new technologies.
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Published date: 1 May 2012
Organisations:
Faculty of Health Sciences
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Local EPrints ID: 340857
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/340857
ISSN: 0042-9686
PURE UUID: 7980575b-8055-4775-b2c0-8595cf185819
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Date deposited: 05 Jul 2012 09:40
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 11:30
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Author:
Frances S. Mair
Author:
Carl May
Author:
Catherine O'Donnell
Author:
Tracy Finch
Author:
Frank Sullivan
Author:
Elizabeth Murray
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