Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Southampton, Southampton SO17 1BJ, UK.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2013 Mar 23;13:111. doi: 10.1186/1472-6963-13-111.
Information and communication technologies (ICTs) are often proposed as 'technological fixes' for problems facing healthcare. They promise to deliver services more quickly and cheaply. Yet research on the implementation of ICTs reveals a litany of delays, compromises and failures. Case studies have established that these technologies are difficult to embed in everyday healthcare.
We undertook an ethnographic comparative analysis of a single computer decision support system in three different settings to understand the implementation and everyday use of this technology which is designed to deal with calls to emergency and urgent care services. We examined the deployment of this technology in an established 999 ambulance call-handling service, a new single point of access for urgent care and an established general practice out-of-hours service. We used Normalization Process Theory as a framework to enable systematic cross-case analysis.
Our data comprise nearly 500 hours of observation, interviews with 64 call-handlers, and stakeholders and documents about the technology and settings. The technology has been implemented and is used distinctively in each setting reflecting important differences between work and contexts. Using Normalisation Process Theory we show how the work (collective action) of implementing the system and maintaining its routine use was enabled by a range of actors who established coherence for the technology, secured buy-in (cognitive participation) and engaged in on-going appraisal and adjustment (reflexive monitoring).
Huge effort was expended and continues to be required to implement and keep this technology in use. This innovation must be understood both as a computer technology and as a set of practices related to that technology, kept in place by a network of actors in particular contexts. While technologies can be 'made to work' in different settings, successful implementation has been achieved, and will only be maintained, through the efforts of those involved in the specific settings and if the wider context continues to support the coherence, cognitive participation, and reflective monitoring processes that surround this collective action. Implementation is more than simply putting technologies in place - it requires new resources and considerable effort, perhaps on an on-going basis.
信息和通信技术(ICTs)常被提议作为解决医疗保健问题的“技术手段”。它们承诺更快、更便宜地提供服务。然而,对 ICT 实施的研究揭示了一系列的延迟、妥协和失败。案例研究已经证实,这些技术很难嵌入日常医疗保健中。
我们对三种不同环境下的单个计算机决策支持系统进行了民族志比较分析,以了解该技术的实施和日常使用情况。该技术旨在处理紧急和紧急护理服务的呼叫。我们考察了该技术在一个成熟的 999 救护车呼叫处理服务、一个新的紧急护理单一接入点和一个成熟的全科医生非工作时间服务中的部署情况。我们使用常规化进程理论作为一个框架,以实现系统的跨案例分析。
我们的数据包括近 500 小时的观察、对 64 名呼叫处理人员和利益相关者的访谈,以及有关技术和环境的文件。该技术在每个环境中都得到了实施和使用,反映了工作和背景之间的重要差异。使用常规化进程理论,我们展示了如何通过一系列行为者来实现系统的实施和维持其日常使用,这些行为者为技术建立了一致性,确保了认可(认知参与),并进行了持续的评估和调整(反思性监测)。
为了实施和维持这项技术的使用,已经付出了巨大的努力,并且还需要继续付出努力。这项创新必须被理解为既是一种计算机技术,也是与该技术相关的一套实践,由特定背景下的一系列行为者所维护。虽然技术可以在不同的环境中“正常工作”,但是只有在涉及到特定环境的那些人付出努力的情况下,并且如果更广泛的环境继续支持围绕这一集体行动的一致性、认知参与和反思性监测过程,才能实现成功的实施并保持其持续使用。实施不仅仅是将技术投入使用——它需要新的资源和相当大的努力,也许需要持续不断地投入。