Stage-oe-small.jpg

Inproceedings3625: Unterschied zwischen den Versionen

Aus Aifbportal
Wechseln zu:Navigation, Suche
(Die Seite wurde neu angelegt: „{{Publikation Erster Autor |ErsterAutorNachname=Grube |ErsterAutorVorname=Anton }} {{Publikation Author |Rank=2 |Author=Tobias Dehling }} {{Publikation Author |Ra…“)
 
K
 
Zeile 23: Zeile 23:
 
|Pages=3207-3216
 
|Pages=3207-3216
 
|Organization=Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences 2018
 
|Organization=Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences 2018
|Publisher=n.a.
+
|Publisher=HICSS
 
}}
 
}}
 
{{Publikation Details
 
{{Publikation Details
 
|Abstract=The health care domain is undergoing a sweeping shift from a model of paternalism towards increased patient-centered care. Vendors offering patient-centered health IT use incentive mechanisms to motivate the continued use of health IT. However, incentive mechanisms may not always be beneficial to patient-centered care and may lack focus on actual treatment processes. Therefore, we focus on the research question: What incentive mechanisms are or are not useful for promoting use of patient-centered health IT and why? We assess and rank 28 incentive mechanisms by utility for patient-centered health IT. Findings reveal that reminders and interface improvements are most beneficial and that social comparison and social facilitation mechanisms are most detrimental to patient-centered care. This work extends the scientific knowledge base on patient-centered health IT, establishes a foundation for future research on patient-centered incentive mechanisms, and provides practical audiences with insights on how to effectively design patient-centered health IT.
 
|Abstract=The health care domain is undergoing a sweeping shift from a model of paternalism towards increased patient-centered care. Vendors offering patient-centered health IT use incentive mechanisms to motivate the continued use of health IT. However, incentive mechanisms may not always be beneficial to patient-centered care and may lack focus on actual treatment processes. Therefore, we focus on the research question: What incentive mechanisms are or are not useful for promoting use of patient-centered health IT and why? We assess and rank 28 incentive mechanisms by utility for patient-centered health IT. Findings reveal that reminders and interface improvements are most beneficial and that social comparison and social facilitation mechanisms are most detrimental to patient-centered care. This work extends the scientific knowledge base on patient-centered health IT, establishes a foundation for future research on patient-centered incentive mechanisms, and provides practical audiences with insights on how to effectively design patient-centered health IT.
|DOI Name= 978-0-9981331-1-9  
+
|DOI Name=978-0-9981331-1-9
 
|Forschungsgruppe=Critical Information Infrastructures
 
|Forschungsgruppe=Critical Information Infrastructures
 
}}
 
}}

Aktuelle Version vom 9. August 2018, 09:31 Uhr


Promoting Use of Patient-Centered Health IT: Assessment and Ranking of Incentive Mechanisms


Promoting Use of Patient-Centered Health IT: Assessment and Ranking of Incentive Mechanisms



Published: 2018 Januar

Buchtitel: Proceedings of the 51th Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences (HICSS 2018)
Seiten: 3207-3216
Verlag: HICSS
Organisation: Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences 2018

Nicht-referierte Veröffentlichung

BibTeX

Kurzfassung
The health care domain is undergoing a sweeping shift from a model of paternalism towards increased patient-centered care. Vendors offering patient-centered health IT use incentive mechanisms to motivate the continued use of health IT. However, incentive mechanisms may not always be beneficial to patient-centered care and may lack focus on actual treatment processes. Therefore, we focus on the research question: What incentive mechanisms are or are not useful for promoting use of patient-centered health IT and why? We assess and rank 28 incentive mechanisms by utility for patient-centered health IT. Findings reveal that reminders and interface improvements are most beneficial and that social comparison and social facilitation mechanisms are most detrimental to patient-centered care. This work extends the scientific knowledge base on patient-centered health IT, establishes a foundation for future research on patient-centered incentive mechanisms, and provides practical audiences with insights on how to effectively design patient-centered health IT.

DOI Link: 978-0-9981331-1-9



Forschungsgruppe

Critical Information Infrastructures


Forschungsgebiet