610 Medizin, Gesundheit
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CIOs' innovation capability is regarded as a precondition of successful HIT adoption in hospitals. Based on the data of 142 CIOs, this study aimed at identifying antecedents of perceived innovation capability. Eight features describing the status quo of the hospital IT management (e.g. use of IT governance frameworks), four features of the hospital structure (e.g. functional diversification) and four CIO characteristics (e.g. duration of employment) were tested as potential antecedents in an exploratory stepwise regression approach. Perceived innovation capability in its entirety and its three sub-dimensions served as criterion. The results show that CIOs' perceived innovation capability could be explained significantly (R2=0.34) and exclusively by facts that described the degree of formalism and structure of IT management in a hospital, e.g. intensive and formalised strategic communication, the existence of an IT strategy and the use of IT governance frameworks. Breaking down innovation capability into its constituents revealed that “innovative organisational culture” contributed to a large extent (R2=0.26) to the overall result sharing several predictors. In contrast, “intrapreneurial personality” (R2=0.11) and “openness towards users” (R2=0.18) could be predicted less well. These results hint at the relationship between working in a well-structured, formalised and strategy oriented environment and the overall feeling of being capable to promote IT innovation.
As health IT supports processes along the entire patient trajectory and involves different types of professional groups, eHealth is inter-professional by nature. The aim of this study, therefore, is to investigate which competencies are at the intersection of the individual groups of health professionals. 718 international experts provided relevance ratings of eHealth competencies for different professional roles in an online survey. Communication and leadership proved to be important competencies across all professions, not only for executives. None or very little differences between professions were found between physicians and nurses, between IT experts at different levels and between IT experts and executives. However, there were a number of competencies rated differently when contrasting direct patient care specialists with executives. These findings should encourage organisations issuing educational recommendations to specify areas of shared competencies more extensively.
This paper describes the methodology and developments towards the TIGER International Recommendation Framework of Core Competencies in Health Informatics 2.0. This Framework is meant to augment the scope from nursing towards a series of six other professional roles, i.e. direct patient care, health information management, executives, chief information officers, engineers and health IT specialists and researchers and educators. Health informatics core competency areas were compiled from various sources that had integrated the literature and were grouped into consistent clusters. The relevance of these core competency areas was rated in a survey by 718 professional experts from 51 countries. Furthermore, 22 local case studies illustrated the competencies and gave insight into examples of local educational practice. The Framework contributes to the overall discourse on how to shape health informatics education to improve quality and safety of care by enabling useful and successful health information systems.
Der zunehmende Einsatz von Informations- und Kommunikationstechnologie im Gesundheitswesen verlangt auch von Angehörigen der Pflegeberufe Kompetenzen zur Nutzung der entsprechenden Systeme und Verfahren. Vor diesem Hintergrund haben sich die AG „Informationsverarbeitung in der Pflege“ der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Medizinische Informatik, Biometrie und Epidemiologie (GMDS), die Österreichische Gesellschaft für Pflegeinformatik (ÖGPI) und die Schweizerische Interessensgruppe Pflegeinformatik (IGPI) innerhalb des Schweizer Berufsverband der Pflegefachfrauen und Pflegefachmänner (SBK) entschlossen, gemeinsame Empfehlungen für benötigte Kernkompetenzfelder in Pflegeinformatik zu erarbeiten. Auf Basis einer iterativen multimethodischen Vorgehensweise unter Einbeziehung von einer großen Anzahl von Fachexperten aus Deutschland, Österreich und der Schweiz (D-A-CH) wurden 24 notwendige Felder von Kernkompetenzen definiert und deren Relevanz für fünf typische Berufsfelder in der Pflege bewertet. Damit liegt erstmalig eine wissenschaftlich fundierte Empfehlung für zu vermittelnde Kernkompetenzfelder in der Pflegeinformatik für verschiedene pflegerische Berufsfelder vor. Sie richtet sich an alle Personen mit Verantwortung für die Planung von Studium, Lehre, Aus- und Weiterbildung in der Pflege.
Background: IT is getting an increasing importance in hospitals. In this
context, major IT decisions are often made by CEOs who are not necessarily IT
experts. Objectives: Therefore, this study aimed at a) exploring different types of IT
decision makers at CEO level, b) identifying hypotheses if trust exists between these
different types of CEOs and their CIOs and c) building hypotheses on potential
consequences regarding risk taking and innovation. Methods: To this end, 14
qualitative interviews with German hospital CEOs were conducted to explore the
research questions. Results: The study revealed three major types: IT savvy CEOs,
IT enthusiastic CEOs and IT indifferent CEOs. Depending on these types, their
relationship with the CIO varied in terms of trust and common language. In case of
IT indifferent CEOs, a potential vicious circle of lack of IT knowledge, missing trust,
low willingness to take risks and low innovation power could be identified.
Conclusion: In order to break of this circle, CEOs seem to need more IT knowledge
and / or greater trust in their CIO.