Evolving competencies to align electronic medical records - a dynamic resource-based perspective on hospitals' co-evolutionary information systems alignment capability.

Business-IT alignment Capability evolution Co-evolutionary information systems alignment Dynamic resource-based perspective Electronic medical records

Journal

Journal of health organization and management
ISSN: 1758-7247
Titre abrégé: J Health Organ Manag
Pays: England
ID NLM: 101179473

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
30 Mar 2022
Historique:
entrez: 1 4 2022
pubmed: 2 4 2022
medline: 5 4 2022
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Advanced Electronic Medical Records (EMR) provide many potential benefits to hospitals. However, because of their broad scope, many stakeholders deal with the EMR and a continuous effort has to be made to keep up with internal and external change. Therefore, hospitals need to deliberately shape their organizational competencies considering the pursuit of alignment, i.e. making sure that the EMR remains optimally aligned with strategies, goals and needs of the hospital and its stakeholders. This paper aims to investigate the evolutionary paths of these alignment competencies and their drivers, from a theoretical perspective of co-evolutionary information systems alignment (COISA). This paper reports on a longitudinal multiple case study of three Dutch hospitals which each recently implemented an advanced EMR system. The authors conducted 35 in-depth interviews in 2 phases (before and after go-live of the EMR), and studied documentation related to the EMR implementations. The findings show that each hospital's COISA capability shows a different evolutionary path. However, two of the three case hospitals ended up coordinating part of their COISA capability to an ecosystem level, i.e. they incorporated other hospitals using the same EMR system to coordinate their alignment efforts, either from an operational perspective, or in terms of orchestration and strategy. The found evolutionary paths' key drivers include "stakeholder initiative", "accumulating experience", "driving events" and "emerging issues". The findings help healthcare practitioners to deliberately shape their organization's COISA capability in pursuit of EMR alignment. Furthermore, the authors add to the knowledge base on co-evolutionary approaches to alignment through the longitudinal approach.

Identifiants

pubmed: 35362298
doi: 10.1108/JHOM-10-2021-0379
pmc: PMC9616019
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Pagination

112-132

Informations de copyright

© Pien Walraven, Rogier van de Wetering, Remko Helms, Marjolein Caniëls and Johan Versendaal.

Références

AMIA Annu Symp Proc. 2006;:982
pubmed: 17238601
J Health Organ Manag. 2022 Mar 30;36(9):112-132
pubmed: 35362298

Auteurs

Pien Walraven (P)

Open University of the Netherlands, Heerlen, The Netherlands.

Rogier van de Wetering (R)

Open University of the Netherlands, Heerlen, The Netherlands.

Remko Helms (R)

Open University of the Netherlands, Heerlen, The Netherlands.

Marjolein Caniëls (M)

Open University of the Netherlands, Heerlen, The Netherlands.

Johan Versendaal (J)

Open University of the Netherlands, Heerlen, The Netherlands.
HU University of Applied Sciences Utrecht, Utrecht, The Netherlands.

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Classifications MeSH