| Literature DB >> 24172852 |
Jeppe Agger Nielsen1, Lars Mathiassen.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Mobile technologies have emerged as important tools that health care personnel can use to gain easy access to client data anywhere. This is particularly useful for nurses and care workers in home health care as they provide services to clients in many different settings. Although a growing body of evidence supports the use of mobile technologies, the diverse implications of mobile health have yet to be fully documented.Entities:
Keywords: case study; government sponsorship; home health care; implementation process; mobile health; mobile technology
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24172852 PMCID: PMC3841343 DOI: 10.2196/jmir.2816
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 5.428
Data sources.
| Data sources | Description |
| Survey to home care managers in all 98 Danish municipalities to track the adoption rate of mobile technology | Managers were interviewed over the phone in June 2007, which enabled a 100% response rate. We used a structured interview guide and inquired about: How many home care agencies are using mobile technology? When did they start using the technology? Which groups of employees make use of mobile technology? We also inquired about their motives for adopting or rejecting the technology, sources of inspiration, and the importance of governmental subsidies. |
| Written materials and interviews with key stakeholders in the home care sector | We reviewed government, consultants, and vendor websites for available written materials as a way to further our understanding of how mobile technology implementation was shaped in interplay with the broader context. |
| We interviewed representatives from Local Government Denmark (LGDK, a major interest group for municipalities), the Ministry of Social Affairs, and Ministry of Finance as they were leading in the discussion on innovating home care by using mobile technology. The interviews were conducted in May 2008 and lasted on average about 1 hour. | |
| Three cases of mobile technology implementation within specific home care agencies (HCA 1, HCA 2, & HCA 3). | The three selected home care agencies had each used mobile technology for some time (respectively 5, 2, and 2 years), which allowed us to achieve comprehensive insight into the implementation process and how the technology was used in day-to-day practices. |
| We conducted semistructured interviews in each case with key stakeholders: managers and employees using mobile technology (nurses and care workers). In total, 10 managers or project managers (respectively 4, 4, and 2 in each case) and 24 employees (respectively 7, 8, and 9 in each case) were interviewed. We organized a protocol to structure the interview process and personalized it for specific stakeholder groups. For instance, the protocol for managers included questions that permitted the managers to express how they perceived the nature of mobile technology, the implementation strategy, and mobile technology in use, but also who they saw as the major sources of inspiration and their collaboration with IT vendors and other stakeholders. | |
| We conducted a survey of care workers across the three selected home care agencies (N=315, response rate 63%), particularly focusing on care workers’ perceptions towards the mobile technology and how they use the technology in daily practice. | |
| Written documents (eg, project descriptions, minutes from meetings, and evaluations) were collected in each case. While interviews enlighten the more informal processes and struggles surrounding mobile technology implementation, written documents identified the formal motives behind mobile technology implementation. |
Figure 1Implementation of mobile health in the Danish home care sector.
The importance of government funding for mobile technology adoption (%) (source: Survey to home care managers in all 98 municipalities).
|
| Yes | No | No answer | Sum | N |
| Has government funding been of decisive importance for mobile technology adoption? | 66 | 30 | 4 | 100 | 76a |
aThe number of municipalities that had adopted mobile technology at the time of the survey (2007).
Interpretive flexibility in mobile health across three cases.
|
| HCA 1 | HCA 2 | HCA 3 |
| Nature of technology | Nokia Communicator with online connectivity and Zealand as provider. | PDAs with online connectivity and Ramböll as provider. | PDAs with offline connectivity and CSC as provider. |
| Managers in support of mobile health. | Managers in support of mobile health. | Managers in support of mobile health. | |
| The reduction in meeting activity proved controversial for care workers, and many experienced difficulties filling out records. | Many care workers experienced technical difficulties, and some remained skeptical towards mobile technology. | Mixed attitude among care workers: many experienced increased control based on detailed time registration, and offline connectivity proved controversial. | |
| Technology strategy | Mobile technology as coordination platform to share information and reduce meeting activities. | Mobile technology as communication medium to improve relationships and status of home care. | Mobile technology as management tool to improve documentation and transparency of service delivery. |
| Technology use | Use of mobile technology to support coordination by documenting and sharing information about activities. Joint morning meetings were abolished, as mobile technology afforded information exchanges. | Use of mobile technology to support communication with managers and colleagues internally and with hospitals or general practitioners externally. | Use of mobile technology to support management of resources by recording information about working hours and service delivery. |