| Literature DB >> 29954388 |
Erik Joukes1, Ronald Cornet2, Martine C de Bruijne3, Nicolette F de Keizer2, Ameen Abu-Hanna2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Healthcare professionals provide care to patients and during that process, record large quantities of data in patient records. Data in an Electronic Health Record should ideally be recorded once and be reusable within the care process as well as for secondary purposes. A common approach to realise this is to let healthcare providers record data in a standardised and structured way at the point of care. Currently, it is not clear to what extent this structured and standardised recording has been adopted by healthcare professionals and what barriers to their adoption exist. Therefore, we developed and validated a multivariable model to capture the concepts underlying the adoption of structured and standardised recording among healthcare professionals.Entities:
Keywords: Adoption; Electronic health records; Intention; Recording; Standardised; Structural equation modelling; Structured
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29954388 PMCID: PMC6027789 DOI: 10.1186/s12911-018-0640-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Inform Decis Mak ISSN: 1472-6947 Impact factor: 2.796
Fig. 1a Structural model - showing the relation between three latent variables (concepts from our theoretical model). b Measurement model - showing the relation between three observed variables (questions from our questionnaire) and one latent variable (concept from the theoretical model).
Used performance measures and targets to validate the measurement model from Hair et al. [9]
| Type of validation | Measure | Target |
|---|---|---|
| internal consistency / composite reliability | Dillon Goldstein’s rho (alternatives are Cronbach’s alpha and eigenvalues) | > 0.60 are acceptable in exploratory research |
| indicator reliability | outer loadings | > 0.708 |
| convergent validity | Average Variance Extracted (AVE) | > 0.5 |
| discriminant validity | A) outer loadings | A) the outer loading of an observed variable on its concept is higher than its cross loadings with other concepts |
| B) Fornell-Larcker criterion | B) the square root of the AVE of a concept should be higher than its correlations with all other concepts |
Fig. 2Our proposed theoretical model consisting of 29 concepts (i.e. latent variables)
All concepts in our model, including origin and explanation of each concept
| Model concepts | Wixom and Todd [7] | Hsieh [6] | This study | Explanation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Information reliability | X | Whether the information in the EHR is reliable | ||
| Completeness | X | Whether the information in the EHR is complete | ||
| Accuracy | X | Whether the information in the EHR is accurate | ||
| Format | X | Whether the information in the EHR is in an understandable format | ||
| Currency | X | Whether the information in the EHR is up to date | ||
| System reliability | X | Whether the user can trust that the EHR works | ||
| Flexibility | X | Whether the user can use the EHR flexibly in different situations | ||
| Integration | X | Whether the user needs to open multiple computer programs to gather all information on patients | ||
| Accessibility | X | Whether the user can access the patient data in every place in the organization | ||
| Timeliness | X | Whether the system responds to user input in a timely manner | ||
| System satisfaction | X | The overall opinion of the user on the quality of the EHR | ||
| Compatibility | X | Whether the EHR supports the work processes of the user | ||
| Awareness | X | Whether the user knows why it is important that their data are recorded correctly | ||
| Perceived ease of use | X | X | The overall opinion of the user on the usability of the EHR | |
| Information satisfaction | X | Whether the user is satisfied with the information that the EHR provides | ||
| Perceived usefulness | X | X | Whether the EHR aids in the user’s daily work | |
| Attitude | X | X | What the user thinks of structured and standardised recording | |
| Interpersonal influence | X | Whether the supervisor promotes correct recording | ||
| Governmental influence | X | Whether the government (i.e. the inspectorate) promotes correct recording | ||
| Subjective norm | X | Whether the user records correctly because colleagues expect this | ||
| Self-efficacy | X | Whether the user is capable of correct recording | ||
| Facilitating conditions | X | Whether there is enough time to record data correctly | ||
| Perceived behavioural control | X | Whether it is within the user’s control to record data correctly | ||
| Situational normality | X | Whether it is normal in the organisation to record correctly | ||
| Structural assurance | X | Whether the organisation ensures that data are stored safely and cannot be lost | ||
| Institutional trust | X | Whether the user trusts that the organisation stores the records safely | ||
| Perceived risk | X | Whether the reuse of data can harm the patients’ privacy and or safety | ||
| Intention to act | X | X | Whether the user wants to record data structured and standardised and wants to reuse data | |
| Behaviour | X | A number of facets that indicate whether the user is already recording structured and standardised data |
Demographics of the included respondents
| n (%) | |
|---|---|
| Total respondents | 3584 (100) |
| Gender | |
| Male | 889 (25) |
| Female | 2413 (67) |
| Age | |
| < 30 | 461 (13) |
| 30–39 | 879 (25) |
| 40–49 | 743 (21) |
| 50–59 | 868 (24) |
| > =60 | 270 (8) |
| Function | |
| Analytical staff | 57 (2) |
| Clinical (co-)care provider | 336 (9) |
| Medical support staff | 223 (6) |
| Management | 90 (3) |
| Medical specialists | 856 (24) |
| Administrative staff | 247 (7) |
| Nurses | 1358 (38) |
| Scientific research | 251 (7) |
| Other | 265 (7) |
Composite reliability measures of latent variables with more than one observed variable
| number of observed variables | Dillon-Goldstein’s rho | |
|---|---|---|
| Attitude | 4 | 0.620 |
| Information reliability | 4 | 0.711 |
| Awareness | 3 | 0.730 |
| Perceived usefulness | 5 | 0.766 |
| Integration | 2 | 0.782 |
| Structural assurance | 2 | 0.802 |
| Behaviour | 11 | 0.804 |
| Accuracy | 2 | 0.825 |
| Perceived risk | 2 | 0.831 |
| Intention to act | 2 | 0.831 |
| Perceived ease of use | 3 | 0.866 |
| Format | 2 | 0.925 |
Latent variables not mentioned in this table have only one observed variable and therefore no scores on these measures
All observed variables, their latent variable, and their loadings
| Observed variable | Latent variable | loading |
|---|---|---|
| InformationReliability1 | information reliability |
|
| InformationReliability2 | information reliability | 0.461 |
| InformationReliability3 | information reliability | 0.540 |
| InformationReliability4 | information reliability | 0.703 |
| Accuracy1 | accuracy |
|
| Accuracy2 | accuracy |
|
| Format1 | format |
|
| Format2 | format |
|
| Integration1 | integration |
|
| Integration2 | integration |
|
| Awareness1 | awareness |
|
| Awareness2 | awareness | 0.534 |
| Awareness3 | awareness |
|
| PerceivedEaseOfUse1 | perceived ease of use |
|
| PerceivedEaseOfUse2 | perceived ease of use |
|
| PerceivedEaseOfUse3 | perceived ease of use |
|
| PerceivedUsefulness1 | perceived usefulness | 0.576 |
| PerceivedUsefulness2 | perceived usefulness |
|
| PerceivedUsefulness3 | perceived usefulness |
|
| PerceivedUsefulness4 | perceived usefulness |
|
| PerceivedUsefulness5 | perceived usefulness | 0.090 |
| Attitude1 | attitude | 0.297 |
| Attitude2 | attitude |
|
| Attitude3 | attitude | 0.554 |
| Attitude4 | attitude | 0.689 |
| StructuralAssurance1 | structural assurance |
|
| StructuralAssurance2 | structural assurance |
|
| PerceivedRisk1 | perceived risk |
|
| PerceivedRisk2 | perceived risk | 0.701 |
| IntentionToAct1 | intention to act |
|
| IntentionToAct2 | intention to act |
|
| Behaviour1 | behaviour | −0.034 |
| Behaviour2 | behaviour |
|
| Behaviour3 | behaviour | 0.689 |
| Behaviour4 | behaviour |
|
| Behaviour5 | behaviour | 0.446 |
| Behaviour6 | behaviour | 0.340 |
| Behaviour7 | behaviour | 0.240 |
| Behaviour8 | behaviour | 0.206 |
| Behaviour9 | behaviour | 0.536 |
| Behaviour10 | behaviour | 0.623 |
| Behaviour11 | behaviour | 0.356 |
Loadings in bold cells satisfy the prescribed threshold (> 0.708). Each observed variable is a question in our questionnaire, the actual questions are available in Additional file 1
Latent variables, mean, sd, and Average Variance Extracted (AVE)
| Latent variable | mean | sd | AVE |
|---|---|---|---|
| information reliability | 3.74 | 0.63 | 0.379 |
| completeness | 3.54 | 1.02 | 1 |
| accuracy | 3.44 | 0.74 | 0.701 |
| format | 3.12 | 0.97 | 0.861 |
| currency | 3.52 | 0.90 | 1 |
| system reliability | 3.47 | 0.90 | 1 |
| flexibility | 3.23 | 0.97 | 1 |
| integration | 3.00 | 0.91 | 0.640 |
| accessibility | 3.67 | 1.07 | 1 |
| timeliness | 3.15 | 1.05 | 1 |
| system satisfaction | 2.96 | 1.03 | 1 |
| compatibility | 3.66 | 0.87 | 1 |
| awareness | 3.60 | 0.60 | 0.481 |
| perceived ease of use | 2.99 | 0.91 | 0.683 |
| information satisfaction | 3.27 | 0.88 | 1 |
| perceived usefulness | 2.93 | 0.97 | 0.449 |
| attitude | 3.90 | 0.51 | 0.353 |
| interpersonal influence | 3.43 | 0.94 | 1 |
| governmental influence | 3.21 | 0.89 | 1 |
| subjective norm | 3.62 | 0.88 | 1 |
| self-efficacy | 3.78 | 0.84 | 1 |
| facilitating conditions | 2.79 | 1.02 | 1 |
| perceived behavioural control | 3.63 | 0.88 | 1 |
| situational normality | 3.50 | 0.91 | 1 |
| structural assurance | 3.49 | 0.73 | 0.664 |
| institutional trust | 3.97 | 0.71 | 1 |
| perceived risk | 2.84 | 0.75 | 0.690 |
| intention to act | 4.04 | 0.59 | 0.701 |
| behaviour | 3.42 | 0.56 | 0.250 |
Fig. 3The (structural) model with path coefficients and coefficients of determination (R2). * p < 0.05, ** p < 0.01, *** p < 0.001