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Institute
- Fakultät WiSo (2142)
- Fakultät AuL (660)
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Hospital CIOs play a central role in the adoption of innovative health IT. Until now, it remained unclear which particular conditions constitute their capability to innovate in terms of intrapersonal as well as organisational factors. An inventory of 20 items was developed to capture these conditions and examined by analysing data obtained from 164 German hospital CIOs. Principal component analysis resulted in three internally consistent components that constitute large portions of the CIOs innovation capability: organisational innovation culture, entrepreneurship personality and openness towards users. Results were used to build composite indicators that allow further evaluations.
Der vorliegende Beitrag geht der Frage nach, inwieweit Geschäftsmodellentwicklung eine Strategie zur Überwindung von Marktversagen in der Assekuranz darstellt. Insbesondere soll gezeigt werden, dass eine Abkehr von der klassischen Beziehung zwischen Versichertem und Versicherer auf Basis eines bilateralen Vertrags neue Märkte eröffnet und mit neuartigen P2P-Geschäftsmodellen bislang nicht-versicherbare Risiken abgesichert werden können. Als empirisches Feld wurde die Absicherung von Wildschäden gewählt, da es sich aktuell um einen Bereich handelt, in dem Marktversagen vorliegt. Auf Basis von 16 episodischen Interviews mit Vertretern der Gemeinschaft der Jäger werden Bedürfnisstrukturen und relevante Kontextfaktoren aufgedeckt und im Hinblick auf Risikoabsicherung und Schadenmanagement zwischen den Communitymitgliedern analysiert. Dieser Beitrag stellt somit eine Gegenposition zum traditionellen Versicherungsgeschäft dar, bei der die Absicherung auf einem großen und diversifizierten Risikokollektiv beruht.
Autopilot an, Augen zu?
(2017)
Mit Geltung der EU-Datenschutz-Grundverordnung (DS-GVO)1 hat das Datenschutzrecht im Mai 2018 eine umfassende Harmonisierung erfahren. Dies gilt auch für Anforderungen an eine datenschutzrechtliche Einwilligung. Die Anpassungen wirken sich nicht nur auf die spezifischen Datenschutzgesetze der Mitgliedstaaten, sondern ebenso auf weitere nationale Gesetzgebungen aus. Betroffen sind sämtliche Bereiche, die die Verarbeitung personenbezogener Daten zum Gegenstand haben. Dieser Beitrag beschäftigt sich speziell mit den Auswirkungen für die Einwilligung in die Datenverarbeitung im Rahmen des digitalen Strommesswesens (sog. Smart Metering.
Gesundheit und Lebenswelt - Subjektive Vorstellungen von Beschäftigten einer WfbM über Gesundheit
(2010)
Diskursanalyse-Diskursive Ergotherapie: Was leistet die Forschungsmethode in der Ergotherapie
(2012)
Ökosystemische Strömungen
(2016)
Spiritualität als Mittel zur Bewältigung schwieriger Pflegesituationen in kirchlichen Einrichtungen
(2013)
In der Untersuchung wird geprüft, ob in kirchlichen Einrichtungen tätige Pflegekräfte zur Bewältigung emotional schwieriger Situationen neben den bekannten Mitteln auch Religiosität und/ oder Spiritualität als Ressource oder Bewältigungsstrategie im Sinne des arbeitspsychologischen Belastungskonzepts nutzen. Sowohl die Erfahrung von Spiritualität als auch ihre Nutzung ist sprachlicher Explizierung nur schwer zugänglich, so dass qualitative Repertory-Grid-Erhebungen die narrativen Interviews unterstützten. Es werden unterschiedliche, auch spirituelle Ressourcen und Bewältigungsstrategien identifiziert und ihre Wirkungsweise beschrieben.
Die folgende Studie wurde vor dem Hintergrund der zunehmenden Relevanz von ökologisch nachhaltigem Handeln in unserer Gesellschaft aufgrund von wachsenden erlebbaren Auswirkungen durch unsere Lebensweise und den Klimawandel durchgeführt. Für die folgende qualitative Studie wurden fünf Studierende und fünf Berufstätige zu den Hintergründen ihres ökologisch nachhaltigen Handelns befragt. Es wurden zehn Einflussfaktoren identifiziert, welche ökologisch nachhaltiges Handeln von Studierenden und Berufstätigen beeinflussen: Wissen & Informationen; Persönliche Relevanz; empfundene Wichtigkeit & Interesse; Erlebnisse & Erfahrungen (auch ehrenamtliches Engagement); Soziale Umfelder (persönliches, studentisches und berufliches Umfeld); Beeinflussung durch Andere (auch Beeinflussung durch Medien); Positiver Nutzen; Abwägung; Gewohnheiten; Gefühle; Möglichkeiten zur Umsetzung. Als theoretische Basis zur Untersuchung von beeinflussenden Faktoren wurde das psychologische Modell zur Erklärung nachhaltigen Handelns von Hamann, Baumann und Löschinger (2016) hinzugezogen. Des Weiteren wurden drei Aspekte zur positiven Auswirkung von ökologisch nachhaltigem Handeln zur Förderung ökologisch nachhaltigen Handelns in der Gesellschaft gefunden: fortlaufender Prozess; Beeinflussung von Anderen; Ideen zur Förderung von ökologisch nachhaltigem Handeln. Weitere Maßnahmenvorschläge und Handlungsempfehlungen wurden v. a. für die Kontexte Beruf, Studium, Schule und Medien aus den Erkenntnissen der Studie abgeleitet.
Der Artikel beschreibt die methodische Herangehensweise und die zentralen Ergebnisse einer Studie zum Wirkungsgefüge von existenziell belastenden Situationen von Pflegekräften in kirchlichen Einrichtungen und zu den Ressourcen, die ihnen bei der Bewältigung helfen, insbesondere spirituellen Ressourcen. Dabei wird das für diese Studie entwickelte Repertory-Grid-gestützte narrative Interview vorgestellt und der Nut-zen dieser Methode anhand des Vorgehens und der Ergebnisse erläutert.
Laut Pflegethermometer 2007 sind im Zeitraum von 1995 bis 2007 circa 50 000 Pflegestellen trotz steigender Anzahl Pflegebedürftiger abgebaut worden. Dies hat Folgen für die Bedürftigen: thematisiert werden Mängel in der elementaren Versorgung mit Blick auf körperliche Bedürftigkeit – die ausreichende Zufuhr von Flüssigkeit oder die ausreichende Hilfe beim Wechsel der Körperhaltung, um Wundliegen zu verhindern, sind beispielsweise nicht immer gewährleistet. Aber auch mit Blick auf seelische Bedürfnisse werden Defizite sichtbar: „Wenn zum Reden keine Zeit mehr bleibt“ (FAZ 13.10.2007), so oder ähnlich lauten Überschriften von Berichten aus der Praxis. Wir haben uns mit der Frage befasst, ob und wie sich ein christliches Ethos der Nächstenliebe auch unter heutigen Rahmenbedingungen in der Pflegepraxis diakonischer Einrichtungen entfalten lässt. Die Befunde unserer Untersuchung zum Ethos fürsorglicher Praxis weisen daraufhin, dass das in Zeitungsberichten und in der Studie zu den Sozialen Menschenrechten älterer Personen in Pflege (Aichele & Schneider 2006) identifizierte Qualitätsproblem im Kern mit der Anwendung der herrschenden Zeitökonomie auf die Pflegesituation zusammenhängt, die deren Eigenzeiten widerspricht und damit das Umsetzen eines Ethos fürsorglicher Praxis erschwert. Denn die Natur menschlicher Wachstumsprozesse, menschlicher Heilungsprozesse und ganz besonders der langsamen Prozesse abnehmender Lebenskraft am Ende des Lebens, kann im Rahmen von Effizienzkalkülen für aufgewendete Zeit zur Pflege kaum berücksichtigt werden
Psychologische Ansätze zum Phänomen „Vertrauen“ beziehen sich überwiegend auf die Face-to-face-Kommunikation und somit auf Vertrauen zwischen Personen – personales Vertrauen. Erkenntnisse zum Verlauf wie auch zu Voraussetzungen von Vertrauensbildung gelten unter Face-toface- Bedingungen. Für virtuelle Begegnungen – sei es im Chatroom, am Telekooperations-Arbeitsplatz oder beim elektronischen Einkaufen – bedarf es ebenso des Vertrauens, jedoch gelten möglicherweise andere Regeln, Prozesse und werden andere Hinweise zum Aufbau von Vertrauen genutzt. Unter Rückgriff auf die soziologischen Konzepte von Giddens zu „faceless committments“ und von Luhmann zu Systemvertrauen werden die Entsprechungen und Unterschiede herausgearbeitet. Anhand von eigenen empirischen Untersuchungen wird die psychologische Vertrauensforschung für die „gesichtslosen“ Begegnungen fortgeschrieben.
Für die arbeitsteilige Kooperation und Interaktion in der Pflege sowie die Koordination der beteiligten Akteure spielt die Über- und Weitergabe des patienten- oder klientenbezogenen Wissens der Pflegekräfte eine entscheidende Rolle. In den letzten Jahrzehnten sind die Anforderungen an die Dokumentation in der Alten- und Krankenpflege deutlich gestiegen. Aber ist damit auch die Professionalität und Qualität der Pflege verbessert worden? Der Beitrag setzt sich mit den Folgen der Ökonomisierung der Pflege bei gleichzeitigen Qualitätsanforderungen auseinander und nimmt anhand empirischer Befunde insbesondere in den Blick, welchen Stellenwert die Pflegekräfte selbst der Dokumentation in ihrer Praxis einräumen. Dabei wird sichtbar, unter welchen Bedingungen die Dokumentation ihre Ziele verfehlt, bzw. worauf es ankommt, um diese zu erreichen.
Der Wandel von Arbeit, der als Subjektivierung und Digitalisierung diskutiert wird, hat unerwartete Folgen: Mehr Selbstverantwortung schafft noch keine befreite Welt der Erwerbsarbeit, und Technik dringt in die Domänen geistiger Arbeit ein. Der Band versammelt Analysen aus soziologischer, psychologischer und psychoanalytischer Sicht und beleuchtet Subjektivität in der Erwerbsarbeit mithilfe verschiedener theoretisch-konzeptioneller Zugänge. Das Ziel ist, einen neuen Bezugsrahmen für kritische Arbeitsforschung zu bilden. Der Inhalt Erfordert der Wandel von Arbeit eine neue Sicht auf Subjektivität? Zur Einführung • Humane Arbeit als geistige Arbeit? • Relationale Subjektivität in subjektivierten Arbeitsverhältnissen • Wie brauchbar sind rollentheoretische Konzeptionen in flexibilisierten Arbeits- und Lebenswelten? • Aus der Subjektivierungsfalle zum handlungsfähigen Akteur – Das Versprechen der Aktionsforschung • Herrschaftsverhältnisse und Wissensformen – Kritische Betrachtung eines Umbruchs bei der Wissensvermittlung in Unternehmen • Die Grenzen instrumenteller Verfügbarkeit von Subjektivität – Einsichten aus der Arbeitswelt der Pflege • Entfremdung und Aneignung in der Arbeit • Subjekt-Objekt-Relationen in der Sozialisation, in der Arbeit und im Alltag Die Herausgebenden Fritz Böhle, Prof. Dr., Universität Augsburg und Institut für sozialwissenschaftliche Forschung e.V. München. Eva Senghaas-Knobloch, Prof. Dr., Universität Bremen, interdisziplinäres Forschungszentrum Nachhaltigkeit (artec)
Pflege kommt aus einer Tradition, in der sich hauptsächlich Frauen selbstlos um Pflegebedürftige kümmerten, ohne dass die üblichen Regelungen beruflicher Arbeit galten. Heute ist Pflegetätigkeit oft durch problematische Arbeitsbedingungen und fehlende Wertschätzung gekennzeichnet. Der Band weist auf, dass dieses Defizit an Anerkennung sich insbesondere auf die "unsichtbaren" Bestandteile der Pflege bezieht, die zum Kern einer menschenwürdigen fürsorglichen Praxis gehören. Die Autorinnen analysieren die dahinterstehenden gesellschaftlichen, institutionellen und rechtlichen Rahmenbedingungen in der Pflege. Es geht in der qualitativen Studie aber auch um die Erfahrungen weiblicher und männlicher Pflegekräfte und Pflegeexperten in diakonischen Einrichtungen und um die Zukunftsfähigkeit häuslicher Pflegearrangements. Die empirische Erhebung bezog sich auf die von Pflegekräften erlebte - und gewünschte - Situation in Akutkrankenhäusern, in der ambulanten Pflege und in Altenpflegeheimen diakonischer Einrichtungen in verschiedenen Orten - darunter Kassel, Hannover, Berlin. Bei der Endauswertung für die Studie wurden 65 Interviews und 10 Beobachtungsprotokolle berücksichtigt.
Interkulturelles Training : Trainingsmanual zur Förderung interkultureller Kompetenzen in der Arbeit
(2016)
Der Schlüssel zur interkulturellen Kompetenz in Unternehmen Die meisten Unternehmen operieren heute global, viele Belegschaften sind multikulturell zusammengesetzt. Für Organisationen und Einzelpersonen ist die Fähigkeit, mit Mitarbeitern und Kollegen aus anderen Kulturen erfolgreich zu kommunizieren, von existentieller Bedeutung. Diese »interkulturelle Handlungskompetenz« ist erlernbar und vermittelbar. Kumbruck und Derboven haben das vorliegende interkulturelle Training konzipiert und erfolgreich durchgeführt. Die dritte Auflage wurde komplett überarbeitet und ergänzt. Bewährter Inhalt – 5 Themen der interkulturellen Zusammenarbeit: – Kultur und Identität, Kommunikation, kulturelle Werte und Regeln, Kooperation in Organisationen und interkulturelle Handlungsfähigkeit – Neu: Lösungstools für Belastungen aus interkultureller Arbeit und neue Module (u.a. „Führen interkultureller Teams“, „Interkulturelle Konfliktlösung“) Methodenvielfalt – 3 didaktische Säulen – Wissensvermittlung: theoretischer Input zur interkulturellen Interaktion – Erfahrungsaustausch: die interkulturellen Erfahrungen der Teilnehmer ergänzen die Theorie – Simulationsspiele: Teilnehmer erleben und reflektieren die eigene interkulturelle Handlungskompetenz im Spiel Übersichtliche und detaillierte Trainingsunterlagen – Einheitlicher Aufbau mit Überblick, Zeitplan, Input-Folien, Moderationsanleitungen und Arbeitsblättern – Neu: Alle Arbeitsmaterialien jetzt zum Download im Internet Globalisierte Arbeit – Zusammenarbeit lernen in 5 Schritten.
Warum engagieren sich manche Menschen für Flüchtlinge, während andere sich gegen die Flüchtlingsaufnahme einsetzen? Auf der Suche nach einer Antwort führen die Autor/innen deutschlandweit Interviews mit Engagierten beider Seiten und erhalten tiefergehenden Einblick in deren Tätigkeiten. Mit offener Haltung werden Motive und Ziele beider Seiten erforscht, aufgezeigt und verglichen. Um dabei ein besseres Verständnis der individuellen Sichtweisen zu ermöglichen, werden die Ergebnisse in einem psychologischen Kontext betrachtet. Es wird deutlich, dass beide Seiten verschiedene Strategien für den Umgang mit Unsicherheit, die die Flüchtlingsthematik mit sich bringt, verfolgen. Obwohl sich beide Seiten eigentlich einen fairen Dialog miteinander wünschen, sind sie durch negative Erfahrungen oder Vorurteile sehr in ihrer Position festgefahren. Aber neben den offensichtlichen Unterschieden zwischen beiden Engagementorientierungen werden auch überraschende Ähnlichkeiten und Dialogmöglichkeiten aufgedeckt. Dieses Buch ist der erste von zwei Bänden zu diesem Forschungsprojekt und bietet den Leser/innen einen spannenden Einblick in das Denken und Handeln der Engagierten.
Pflege in der Rehabilitation
(2014)
Co-financing arrangements in which investors from outside the motion picture industry become co-owners of the completed films are a common phenomenon in Hollywood. Kay H. Hofmann analyzes the conflicts of interest and the organizational problems that may arise between the experienced major studios and investors with comparably low industry expertise. Guided by principal agent theory, the empirical analysis provides evidence for adverse selection and moral hazard. Based on his findings, the author develops solutions that are not only relevant for investors but also for film producers who rely on the long-term availability of external funds.
The location of manufacturing is operationally and strategically important for multinational companies. The spatial dispersion of manufacturing is determined by firm-specific as well as external factors, both of which are subject to constant change. After decades of offshoring production, the paper uses interview data from UK high value manufacturing companies to explore the recent phenomenon of reshoring and the strategic and operational effects of manufacturing location. The analyses show that concentrating manufacturing in home countries enables firms to increase organizational agility and stimulate innovation. However, under certain conditions, firms also continue benefiting from the known advantages of offshoring. This underlines that there is no universal recommendation for improving competitiveness by a certain spatial configuration of manufacturing. Instead, firms need to consider their specific markets, competitive context, and capabilities when strategizing manufacturing location."
By drawing on the two prevailing economic stardom theories, the paper investigates the sources of superstardom in the US movie industry. For the econometric analysis, we use income and popularity data of screen actresses and actors from the annual Celebrity 100 lists as published by Forbes Magazine. The empirical findings indicate that Hollywood, in contrast to other professional settings, supports two different types of stars. While 'talent stars' exploit acting merit, it is media exposure that drives the income of 'publicity stars'. Apparently, in the motion picture industry both underlying resources are equally important and equally valued. Based on these insights we develop concrete recommendations for the career management of artists and the management of film projects.
How do companies decide where to locate their manufacturing? This study uses insights from manufacturing company executives collected by means of in-depth interviews with 50 manufacturers in the United Kingdom to develop an understanding of manufacturing location decision making. The findings indicate that companies derive competitive advantage from organizing manufacturing in different ways. Retaining or reshoring manufacturing to a company’s home country can enhance new product development, control of quality, product customization, delivery performance, and cost leadership. On the other hand, companies can enhance new product development, customization, and delivery performance for new markets, if production facilities are offshored to or in proximity to these locations. In addition, some companies use a hybrid approach of offshoring the production of some components or products for cost arbitrage while retaining or reshoring other components or products for advantages from value chain integration. Based on the findings of this study, a set of key manufacturing location questions are developed that should be considered by firms pondering onshore, offshore, reshore, or hybrid manufacturing location decisions.
Stakeholder relations and sustainability practices of US small and medium-sized manufacturers
(2012)
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to investigate the adoption of sustainability practices by small and medium-sized manufacturing (SMM) firms, the ways these firms work with their stakeholders for social and environmental purposes, and the relationships between the adoption of sustainability practices, stakeholder interaction, and product and process innovation.
Design/methodology/approach: This paper uses data from telephone interviews with 296 companies, a sustainability typology, and descriptive and statistical regression analysis.
Findings: The majority of the firms are adopting sustainability practices at least to some degree,stakeholders such as community advocacy groups, employees, suppliers, customers, and the localmedia are influencing the adoption of sustainability practices, and firms with high adoption rates of environmental practices are more successful in product and process innovation.Practical implications– The results of this research can help firms and stakeholder groups with their joint efforts to develop sustainability strategies. Community advocacy groups, employees,suppliers, customers, and the local media are capable of motivating firms to give something back tothe communities in which they conduct their business.
Originality/value: This paper contributes new understanding of the adoption of sustainabilitypractices by SMM firms, the ways these firms work with their stakeholders for social and environmental purposes, and the relationships between the adoption of sustainability practices,stakeholder interaction, and product and process innovation.
In this article, we build on Stigler and Becker’s (1977) “consumption capitaltheory” and propose a novel conceptualization of film quality for the analysisof motion picture franchises. Generally, this theorypredicts that the utilityconsumers derive from a particular goodor service increases with prior con-sumption. We test our theoretical conjectures by drawing on the population ofsequels that were running in the US between 1992 and 2011. The empiricalresults point to the explanatory power of the proposed framework. Filmexecutives may use our findings to improve the profitability of their sequelproductions. From a theoretical point of view, consumption capital theoryallows for a more refined analysis of sequel performance along differentdimensions. Moreover, it may provide a fruitful basis for the analysis of otherserial media content, including books, TV, music, and games.
Introduction: Establishing continuity of care in handovers at changes of shift is a challenging endeavor that is jeopardized by time pressure and errors typically occurring during synchronous communication. Only if the outgoing and incoming persons manage to collaboratively build a common ground for the next steps of care is it possible to ensure a proper continuation. Electronic systems, in particular electronic patient record systems, are powerful providers of information but their actual use might threaten achieving a common understanding of the patient if they force clinicians to work asynchronously. In order to gain a deeper understanding of communication failures and how to overcome them, we performed a systematic review of the literature, aiming to answer the following four research questions: (1a) What are typical errors and (1b) their consequences in handovers? (2) How can they be overcome by conventional strategies and instruments? (3) electronic systems? (4) Are there any instruments to support collaborative grounding?
Methods: We searched the databases MEDLINE, CINAHL, and COCHRANE for articles on handovers in general and in combination with the terms electronic record systems and grounding that covered the time period of January 2000 to May 2012.
Results: The search led to 519 articles of which 60 were then finally included into the review. We found a sharp increase in the number of relevant studies starting with 2008. As could be documented by 20 studies that addressed communication errors, omission of detailed patient information including anticipatory guidance during handovers was the greatest problem. This deficiency could be partly overcome by structuring and systematizing the information, e.g. according to Situation, Background, Assessment and Recommendation schema (SBAR), and by employing electronic tools integrated in electronic records systems as 23 studies on conventional and 22 articles on electronic systems showed. Despite the increase in quantity and quality of the information achieved, it also became clear that there was still the unsolved problem of anticipatory guidance and presenting “the full story” of the patient. Only a small number of studies actually addressed how to establish common ground with the help of electronic tools.
Discussion: The increase in studies manifests the rise of great interest in the handover scenario. Electronic patient record systems proved to be excellent information feeders to handover tools, but their role in collaborative grounding is unclear. Concepts of how to move to joint information processing and IT-enabled social interaction have to be implemented and tested.
Background: Continuous improvements of IT-performance in healthcare organisations require actionable performance indicators, regularly conducted, independent measurements and meaningful and scalable reference groups. Existing IT-benchmarking initiatives have focussed on the development of reliable and valid indicators, but less on the questions about how to implement an environment for conducting easily repeatable and scalable IT-benchmarks.
Objectives: This study aims at developing and trialling a procedure that meets the afore-mentioned requirements.
Methods: We chose a well established, regularly conducted (inter-) national IT-survey of healthcare organisations (IT-Report Healthcare) as the environment and offered the participants of the 2011 survey (CIOs of hospitals) to enter a benchmark. The 61 structural and functional performance indicators covered among others the implementation status and integration of IT-systems and functions, global user satisfaction and the resources of the IT-department. Healthcare organisations were grouped by size and ownership. The benchmark results were made available electronically and feedback on the use of these results was requested after several months.
Results: Fifty-ninehospitals participated in the benchmarking. Reference groups consisted of up to 141 members depending on the number of beds (size) and the ownership (public vs. private). A total of 122 charts showing single indicator frequency views were sent to each participant. The evaluation showed that 94.1% of the CIOs who participated in the evaluation considered this benchmarking beneficial and reported that they would enter again. Based on the feedback of the participants we developed two additional views that provide a more consolidated picture.
Conclusion: The results demonstrate that establishing an independent, easily repeatable and scalable IT-benchmarking procedure is possible and was deemed desirable. Based on these encouraging results a new benchmarking round which includes process indicators is currently conducted.
Objectives: eHealth and innovation are often regarded as synonyms - not least because eHealth technologies and applications are new to their users. This position paper challenges this view and aims at exploring the nature of eHealth innovation against the background of common definitions of innovation and facts from the biomedical and health informatics literature. A good understanding of what constitutes innovative eHealth developments allows the degree of innovation to be measured and interpreted.
Methods: To this end, relevant biomedical and health informatics literature was searched mainly in Medline and ACM digital library. This paper presents seven facts about implementing and applying new eHealth developments hereby drawing on the experience published in the literature.
Results: The facts are: 1. eHealth innovation is relative. 2. Advanced clinical practice is the yardstick. 3. Only used and usable eHealth technology can give birth to eHealth innovatio. 4. One new single eHealth function does not make a complex eHealth innovation. 5. eHealth innovation is more evolution than revolution. 6. eHealth innovation is often triggered behind the scenes; and 7. There is no eHealth innovation without sociocultural change.
Conclusions: The main conclusion of the seven facts is that eHealth innovations have many ingredients: newness, availability, advanced clinical practice with proven outcomes, use and usability, the supporting environment, other context factors and the stakeholder perspectives. Measuring eHealth innovation is thus a complex matter. To this end we propose the development of a composite score that expresses comprehensively the nature of eHealth innovation and that breaks down its complexity into the three dimensions: i) eHealth adoption, ii) partnership with advanced clinical practice, and iii) use and usability of eHealth. In order to better understand the momentum and mechanisms behind eHealth innovation the fourth dimension, iv) eHealth supporting services and means, needs to be studied. Conceptualising appropriate measurement instruments also requires eHealth innovation to be distinguished from eHealth sophistication, performance and quality, although innovation is intertwined with these concepts. The demanding effort for defining eHealth innovation and measuring it properly seem worthwhile and promise advances in creating better systems. This paper thus intends to stimulate the necessary discussion.
Background: Clinical handovers at changes of shifts are typical scenarios of time restricted and information intensive communication, which are highly cognitively demanding. The currently available applications supporting handovers typically present complex information in a textual checklist-like manner. This presentation style has been criticised for not meeting the specific user requirements.
Objectives: We, therefore, aimed at developing a concept for visualising the overview of a clinical case that serves as an alternative way to checklist-like presentations in clinical handovers. We also aimed at implementing this concept in a handoverEHR in order to support the pre-handover phase, the actual handover, and the post-handover phase as well as at evaluating its usability and attractiveness.
Results: We developed and implemented a concept that draws on Tolman's pioneering work on cognitive maps that we designed in accordance with Gestalt principles. These maps provide a pictorial overview of a clinical case. The application to build, manipulate, and store the cognitive maps was integrated into an openEHR based handover record that extends conventional records with handover specific information. Usability (n = 28) and attractiveness (n = 26) testing with experienced clinicians resulted in good ratings for suitability for the task as well as for attractiveness and pragmatism.
Conclusion: We propose cognitive maps to represent and visualise the clinical case in situations where there is limited time to present complex information.
The demand for evidence-based health informatics and benchmarking of 'good' information systems in health care gives an opportunity to continue reporting on recent papers in the German journal GMS Medical Informatics, Biometry and Epidemiology (MIBE) here. The publications in focus deal with a comparison of benchmarking initiatives in German-speaking countries, use of communication standards in telemonitoring scenarios, the estimation of national cancer incidence rates and modifications of parametric tests. Furthermore papers in this issue of MIM are introduced which originally have been presented at the Annual Conference of the German Society of Medical Informatics, Biometry and Epidemiology. They deal as well with evidence and evaluation of 'good' information systems but also with data harmonization, surveillance in obstetrics, adaptive designs and parametrical testing in statistical analysis, patient registries and signal processing.
Background: Availability and usage of individual IT applications have been studied intensively in the past years. Recently, IT support of clinical processes is attaining increasing attention. The underlying construct that describes the IT support of clinical workflows is clinical information logistics. This construct needs to be better understood, operationalised and measured.
Objectives: It is therefore the aim of this study to propose and develop a workflow composite score (WCS) for measuring clinical information logistics and to examine its quality based on reliability and validity analyses.
Methods: We largely followed the procedural model of MacKenzie and colleagues (2011) for defining and conceptualising the construct domain, for developing the measurement instrument, assessing the content validity, pretesting the instrument, specifying the model, capturing the data and computing the WCS and testing the reliability and validity.
Results: Clinical information logistics was decomposed into the descriptors data and information, function, integration and distribution, which embraced the framework validated by an analysis of the international literature. This framework was refined selecting representative clinical processes. We chose ward rounds, pre- and post-surgery processes and discharge as sample processes that served as concrete instances for the measurements. They are sufficiently complex, represent core clinical processes and involve different professions, departments and settings. The score was computed on the basis of data from 183 hospitals of different size, ownership, location and teaching status. Testing the reliability and validity yielded encouraging results: the reliability was high with r(split-half) = 0.89, the WCS discriminated between groups; the WCS correlated significantly and moderately with two EHR models and the WCS received good evaluation results by a sample of chief information officers (n = 67). These findings suggest the further utilisation of the WCS.
Conclusion: As the WCS does not assume ideal workflows as a gold standard but measures IT support of clinical workflows according to validated descriptors a high portability of the WCS to other hospitals in other countries is very likely. The WCS will contribute to a better understanding of the construct clinical information logistics.
Hochschule und Universität Osnabrück haben mit regionalen Partnern (Stadt, Landkreis, Bistum, evangelisch-lutherischem Kirchenkreis, Kompetenzzentrum Gesundheitswirtschaft) die Grundsatzvereinbarung unterzeichnet, in Osnabrück einen Gesundheitscampus zu etablieren. Das Ziel ist, einen Ort zu schaffen, an dem Wissenschaft, Unternehmen der Gesundheitsversorgung, Träger von Gesundheitseinrichtungen und Politik zusammenkommen, um innovative Versorgungskonzepte für die Region zu erproben. „ROSE – das Lernende Gesundheitssystem in der Region Osnabrück-Emsland“ ist ein Großprojekt im Rahmen des Gesundheitscampus Osnabrück, das von dem Niedersächsischen Ministerium für Wissenschaft und Kultur (MWK) über 5 Jahre gefördert wird. Dabei wird das Prinzip des Lernens durch Feedback angewendet. Das bedeutet, dass durch Forschung in und mit der Praxis Evidenz im Sinne von practice-based evidence erzeugt wird, d.h. Evidenz für eine bessere Versorgungspraxis unter Berücksichtigung städtischer und ländlicher Strukturen. Dies hat zur Konsequenz, dass der Transferprozess zwischen Hochschule und Versorgungspraxis nicht am Ende sondern bereits am Anfang steht. Mit dem Ansatz einer wiederkehrenden Abfolge von Forschungsfragen und Analysen von Daten aus der Versorgungspraxis rekurriert ROSE auf das Prinzip des „Learning Health Care System“ (IOM, 2007). Im Rahmen von ROSE stimmen sich Hochschule und Universität Osnabrück ab, um die Ziele des Gesundheitscampus zu erreichen. Die geplante Umsetzung wird anhand eines Modells mit fünf Maßnahmen vorgestellt. Diese bauen auf der Vielfalt von bereits bestehenden Gesundheitsstudiengängen in Osnabrück auf und bringen Forschung, Nachwuchsförderung und Translation von Forschungsergebnissen zusammen.
Objective: To pilot benchmark measures of health information and communication technology (ICT) availability and use to facilitate cross-country learning.
Materials and Methods: A prior Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development–led effort involving 30 countries selected and defined functionality-based measures for availability and use of electronic health records, health information exchange, personal health records, and telehealth. In this pilot, an Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development Working Group compiled results for 38 countries for a subset of measures with broad coverage using new and/or adapted country-specific or multinational surveys and other sources from 2012 to 2015. We also synthesized country learnings to inform future benchmarking.
Results: While electronic records are widely used to store and manage patient information at the point of care—all but 2 pilot countries reported use by at least half of primary care physicians; many had rates above 75%—patient information exchange across organizations/settings is less common. Large variations in the availability and use of telehealth and personal health records also exist.
Discussion: Pilot participation demonstrated interest in cross-national benchmarking. Using the most comparable measures available to date, it showed substantial diversity in health ICT availability and use in all domains. The project also identified methodological considerations (e.g., structural and health systems issues that can affect measurement) important for future comparisons.
Conclusion: While health policies and priorities differ, many nations aim to increase access, quality, and/or efficiency of care through effective ICT use. By identifying variations and describing key contextual factors, benchmarking offers the potential to facilitate cross-national learning and accelerate the progress of individual countries.
Multinational health IT benchmarks foster cross-country learning and have been employed at various levels, e.g. OECD and Nordic countries. A bi-national benchmark study conducted in 2007 revealed a significantly higher adoption of health IT in Austria compared to Germany, two countries with comparable healthcare systems. We now investigated whether these differences still persisted. We further studied whether these differences were associated with hospital intrinsic factors, i.e. the innovative power of the organisation and hospital demographics. We thus performed a survey to measure the “perceived IT availability” and the “innovative power of the hospital” of 464 German and 70 Austrian hospitals. The survey was based on a questionnaire with 52 items and was given to the directors of nursing in 2013/2014. Our findings confirmed a significantly greater IT availability in Austria than in Germany. This was visible in the aggregated IT adoption composite score “IT function” as well as in the IT adoption for the individual functions “nursing documentation” (OR = 5.98), “intensive care unit (ICU) documentation” (OR = 2.49), “medication administration documentation” (OR = 2.48), “electronic archive” (OR = 2.27) and “medication” (OR = 2.16). “Innovative power” was the strongest factor to explain the variance of the composite score “IT function”. It was effective in hospitals of both countries but significantly more effective in Austria than in Germany. “Hospital size” and “hospital system affiliation” were also significantly associated with the composite score “IT function”, but they did not differ between the countries. These findings can be partly associated with the national characteristics. Indicators point to a more favourable financial situation in Austrian hospitals; we thus argue that Austrian hospitals may possess a larger degree of financial freedom to be innovative and to act accordingly. This study is the first to empirically demonstrate the effect of “innovative power” in hospitals on health IT adoption in a bi-national health IT benchmark. We recommend directly including the financial situation into future regression models. On a political level, measures to stimulate the “innovative power” of hospitals should be considered to increase the digitalisation of healthcare.
Background: For more than 30 years, there has been close cooperation between Japanese and German scientists with regard to information systems in health care. Collaboration has been formalized by an agreement between the respective scientific associations. Following this agreement, two joint workshops took place to explore the similarities and differences of electronic health record systems (EHRS) against the background of the two national healthcare systems that share many commonalities.
Objectives: To establish a framework and requirements for the quality of EHRS that may also serve as a basis for comparing different EHRS.
Methods: Donabedian's three dimensions of quality of medical care were adapted to the outcome, process, and structural quality of EHRS and their management. These quality dimensions were proposed before the first workshop of EHRS experts and enriched during the discussions.
Results: The Quality Requirements Framework of EHRS (QRF-EHRS) was defined and complemented by requirements for high quality EHRS. The framework integrates three quality dimensions (outcome, process, and structural quality), three layers of information systems (processes and data, applications, and physical tools) and three dimensions of information management (strategic, tactical, and operational information management).
Conclusions: Describing and comparing the quality of EHRS is in fact a multidimensional problem as given by the QRF-EHRS framework. This framework will be utilized to compare Japanese and German EHRS, notably those that were presented at the second workshop.
Background: While health informatics recommendations on competencies and education serve as highly desirable corridors for designing curricula and courses, they cannot show how the content should be situated in a specific and local context. Therefore, global and local perspectives need to be reconciled in a common framework.
Objectives: The primary aim of this study is therefore to empirically define and validate a framework of globally accepted core competency areas in health informatics and to enrich this framework with exemplar information derived from local educational settings.
Methods: To this end, (i) a survey was deployed and yielded insights from 43 nursing experts from 21 countries worldwide to measure the relevance of the core competency areas, (ii) a workshop at the International Nursing Informatics Conference (NI2016) held in June 2016 to provide information about the validation and clustering of these areas and (iii) exemplar case studies were compiled to match these findings with the practice. The survey was designed based on a comprehensive compilation of competencies from the international literature in medical and health informatics.
Results: The resulting recommendation framework consists of 24 core competency areas in health informatics defined for five major nursing roles. These areas were clustered in the domains “data, information, knowledge”, “information exchange and information sharing”, “ethical and legal issues”, “systems life cycle management”, “management” and “biostatistics and medical technology”, all of which showed high reliability values. The core competency areas were ranked by relevance and validated by a different group of experts. Exemplar case studies from Brazil, Germany, New Zealand, Taiwan/China, United Kingdom (Scotland) and the United States of America expanded on the competencies described in the core competency areas.
Conclusions: This international recommendation framework for competencies in health informatics directed at nurses provides a grid of knowledge for teachers and learner alike that is instantiated with knowledge about informatics competencies, professional roles, priorities and practical, local experience. It also provides a methodology for developing frameworks for other professions/disciplines. Finally, this framework lays the foundation of cross-country learning in health informatics education for nurses and other health professionals.
While Nursing Informatics competencies seem essential for the daily work of nurses, they are not formally integrated into nursing education in Austria, Germany and Switzerland, nor are there any national educational recommendations. The aim of this paper is to show how such recommendations can be developed, what competency areas are most relevant in the three countries and how the recommendations can be implemented in practice. To this end, a triple iterative procedure was proposed and applied starting with national health informatics recommendations for other professionals, matching and enriching these findings with topics from the international literature and finally validating them in an expert survey with 87 experts and in focus group sessions. Out of the 24 compiled competency areas, the relevance ratings of the following four recommended areas achieved values above 90%: nursing documentation (including terminologies), principles of nursing informatics, data protection and security, and quality assurance and quality management. As there were no significant differences between the three countries, these findings laid the foundation of the DACH Recommendations of Nursing Informatics as joint German (D), Austrian (A), and Swiss (CH) recommendations in Nursing Informatics. The methodology proposed has been utilized internationally, which demonstrates the added value of this study also outside the confines of Austria, Germany, Switzerland.
Objective: The more people there are who use clinical information systems (CIS) beyond their traditional intramural confines, the more promising the benefits are, and the more daunting the risks will be. This review thus explores the areas of ethical debates prompted by CIS conceptualized as smart systems reaching out to patients and citizens. Furthermore, it investigates the ethical competencies and education needed to use these systems appropriately.
Methods: A literature review covering ethics topics in combination with clinical and health information systems, clinical decision support, health information exchange, and various mobile devices and media was performed searching the MEDLINE database for articles from 2016 to 2019 with a focus on 2018 and 2019. A second search combined these keywords with education.
Results: By far, most of the discourses were dominated by privacy, confidentiality, and informed consent issues. Intertwined with confidentiality and clear boundaries, the provider-patient relationship has gained much attention. The opacity of algorithms and the lack of explicability of the results pose a further challenge. The necessity of sociotechnical ethics education was underpinned in many studies including advocating education for providers and patients alike. However, only a few publications expanded on ethical competencies. In the publications found, empirical research designs were employed to capture the stakeholders’ attitudes, but not to evaluate specific implementations.
Conclusion: Despite the broad discourses, ethical values have not yet found their firm place in empirically rigorous health technology evaluation studies. Similarly, sociotechnical ethics competencies obviously need detailed specifications. These two gaps set the stage for further research at the junction of clinical information systems and ethics.
Der vorliegende Expertenstandard ist eine Zusammenführung des Expertenstandard "Schmerzmanagement in der Pflege bei akuten Schmerzen, 1. Aktualisierung 2011" und des Expertenstandards "Schmerzmanagement in der Pflege bei chronischen Schmerzen, Entwicklung - Konsentierung - Implementierung" im Rahmen der gemeinsamen Aktualisierung.
Health IT adoption research is rooted in Rogers' Diffusion of Innovation theory, which is based on longitudinal analyses. However, many studies in this field use cross-sectional designs. The aim of this study therefore was to design and implement a system to (i) consolidate survey data sets originating from different years (ii) integrate additional secondary data and (iii) query and statistically analyse these longitudinal data. Our system design comprises a 5-tier-architecture that embraces tiers for data capture, data representation, logics, presentation and integration. In order to historicize data properly and to separate data storage from data analytics a data vault schema was implemented. This approach allows the flexible integration of heterogeneous data sets and the selection of comparable items. Data analysis is prepared by compiling data in data marts and performed by R and related tools. IT Report Healthcare data from 2011, 2013 and 2017 could be loaded, analysed and combined with secondary longitudinal data.
Health IT and communication systems are indispensable in German hospitals for clinical as well as administrative process support. However, IT is often regarded as a “black box” for hospital CEOs. Thus, the question arises how can CEOs decide if they do not know what is in the box? In order to answer this question, half-structured interviews with 14 German hospital CEOs were conducted. They revealed three principle decision processes: the supported decision, the joint decision and the corporate level decision. In all cases, the hospital CEO and the CIO interacted to reach the final decision, most strongly in the joint decision mode and least strongly in the corporate decision mode. Only the joint decision mode definitely forced the CEO to open the “black box” of IT. In the era of digitalisation, however, CEOs must develop better competencies to decide over complex matters.
Patient handovers are cognitively demanding, crucial for information continuity and patient safety, but error prone. This study investigated the effect of an electronic handover tool, i.e. the handoverEHR, on the memory and care planning performance of nurse students (n=32) in a randomised, controlled cross-over design with the factors handover task and handover role. On a descriptive level, handover recipients could improve their memory performance with electronic support, handover givers their performance of writing care plans. Statistically meaningful differences occurred, however, only when the participants were givers. Without handover experience and with low fluency to word problems, givers performed badly in the most demanding of the handover tasks. Final recommendations, however, can only be made after replicating this study in a clinical setting with mixed groups.
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.
Current frameworks postulate the success of health IT innovations to be determined by the professionalism of the information management (PIM). Still, empirical knowledge about PIM is scarce up until today. This study seeks to answer three research questions: (1.) How can PIM be measured in a reliable and valid way, (2.) how pronounced is PIM in German hospitals and (3.) do hospital characteristics have an impact on the degree of PIM? Based on the results of an expert workshop and frameworks for information management (IM) items for a PIM inventory were developed and the inventory sent to 1349 chief information officers of German hospitals. A principle component analysis based on the responses of 196 hospitals confirmed the three components that had been proposed by the frameworks: the strategic, the tactical and the operational level. The full inventory implied satisfying reliability and allowed a PIM composite-score to be calculated. The PIM scores for strategic and tactical IM were found to be far lower than for operational IM which hints at strong deficits in these areas. A stepwise regression model indicated that the degree of PIM significantly increased with the size of the hospital, which had been expected and hints the validity of the PIM inventory. This tool offers potentials for hospitals to classify and improve their IM.
Going Mobile : An Empirical Model for Explaining Successful Information Logistics in Ward Rounds
(2018)
Background: Medical ward rounds are critical focal points of inpatient care that call for uniquely flexible solutions to provide clinical information at the bedside. While this fact is undoubted, adoption rates of mobile IT solutions remain rather low.
Objectives: Our goal was to investigate if and how mobile IT solutions influence successful information provision at the bedside, i.e. clinical information logistics, as well as to shed light at socio-organizational factors that facilitate adoption rates from a user-centered perspective.
Methods: Survey data were collected from 373 medical and nursing directors of German, Austrian and Swiss hospitals and analyzed using variance-based Structural Equation Modelling (SEM).
Results: The adoption of mobile IT solutions explains large portions of clinical information logistics and is in itself associated with an organizational culture of innovation and end user participation.
Conclusion: Results should encourage decision makers to understand mobility as a core constituent of information logistics and thus to promote close end-user participation as well as to work towards building a culture of innovation.
The workflow-oriented dissemination of electronic patient data is a central goal of IT deployment in hospitals. Against this background, the present study examines two research questions: (1.) Are there differences in the availability of electronic patient data (AEPD) between different clinical workflows and data types and (2.) which structural and organizational factors determine AEPD? Based on a Germany wide hospital survey, AEPD was assessed along six clinical workflows. While AEPD was lowest for ward rounds, discharge showed the highest AEPD with pre- and post-surgery processes ranging in between. With regard to the data types analyzed, patient demographics and observation findings obtained the highest AEPD scores. Electrophysiological results, checklists and warnings were less common electronically and received lower AEPD scores. Multiple linear regression analysis resulted in a significant model that explained 34.4% of the variance of AEPD. Large hospitals and those with a professional information management, a high health IT related innovation culture and a nursing informatics officer possess higher AEPD scores and thus have better clinical information logistics mechanisms at their command.
Health IT systems are employed to support continuity of care via information continuity, while management continuity is often neglected. This study aims at investigating issues of management continuity when developing a collaborative decision support system for chronic wounds. Thirty-three experts from a variety of professions and disciplines discussed problems and possible solutions in four workshops. The following topics emerged from the discussion: existing networks involving payers, responsibilities as well as good discharge management. These topics clearly address management continuity and are also relevant for the scenario of inter-professional wound care across different settings.
The establishment of successful clinical information logistics (CIL) within the care processes is one of the main objectives of strategic health IT management in hospitals. While technical realisations in terms of useful, usable and interoperable IT solutions are essential precursors of CIL, there is limited empirical research on what socio-organisational factors underlie an innovation-friendly culture and how they can affect successful information provision. We applied factor analysis on survey data from 403 clinical directors from Germany, Austria and Switzerland and used the dimensions identified to explain the level of CIL with ordered logistic regression analysis. The intensity of collaboration and exchange with the IT department as well as the degree of executive IT leadership showed to be strongly associated with better CIL while personal views and attitudes of clinical directors were not. Analysing country differences revealed the degree of the exchange with the IT department to be significantly lower in German hospitals. This points at a potential strategic lever for German hospital executives to focus on.
This prospective longitudinal study aims at better understanding eHealth success factors in different European nations, esp. the role of eHealth-legislation in Switzerland and Germany. Qualitative interviews with 39 matched experts from a large variety of institutions in both nations were conducted. The individual statements in the interviews and the overall satisfaction rating indicate a clear trend for a more optimistic attitude towards the law in Switzerland than in Germany. This result is not surprising given the history of a telematics infrastructure in Germany. Cross-country learning topics for German politicians are the inclusion of the inpatient sector and the focus on one major application. In a next step, interview results from Austria will be included and with that the scope of study findings enriched.
Frequent users of emergency departments (ED) pose a significant challenge to hospital emergency services. Despite a wealth of studies in this field, it is hardly understood, what medical conditions lead to frequent attendance. We examine (1) what ambulatory care sensitive conditions (ACSC) are linked to frequent use, (2) how frequent users can be clustered into subgroups with respect to their diagnoses, acuity and admittance, and (3) whether frequent use is related to higher acuity or admission rate. We identified several ACSC that highly increase the risk for heavy ED use, extracted four major diagnose subgroups and found no significant effect neither for acuity nor admission rate. Our study indicates that especially patients in need of (nursing) care form subgroups of frequent users, which implies that quality of care services might be crucial for tackling frequent use. Hospitals are advised to regularly analyze their ED data in the EHR to better align resources.
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.
Radiology has a reputation for having a high affinity to innovation – particularly with regard to information technologies. Designed for supporting the peculiarities of radiological diagnostic workflows, Radiology Information Systems (RIS) and Picture Archiving and Communication Systems (PACS) developed into widely used information systems in hospitals and form the basis for advancing the field towards automated image diagnostics. RIS and PACS can thus serve as meaningful indicators of how quickly IT innovations diffuse in secondary care settings – an issue that requires increased attention in research and health policy in the light of increasingly fast innovation cycles. We therefore conducted a retrospective longitudinal observational study to research the diffusion dynamics of RIS and PACS in German hospitals between 2005 and 2017. Based upon data points collected within the “IT Report Healthcare” and building on Rogers’ Diffusion of Innovation (DOI) theory, we applied a novel methodological technique by fitting Bayesian Bass Diffusion Models on past adoption rates. The Bass models showed acceptable goodness of fit to the data and the results indicated similar growth rates of RIS and PACS implementations and suggest that market saturation is almost reached. Adoption rates of PACS showed a slightly higher coefficient of imitation (q = 0.25) compared to RIS (q = 0.11). However, the diffusion process expands over approximately two decades for both systems which points at the need for further research into how innovation diffusion can be accelerated effectively. Furthermore, the Bayesian approach to Bass modelling showed to have several advantages over the classical frequentists approaches and should encourage adoption and diffusion research to adapt similar techniques.
Personal health records (PHR) are instruments to compile, store and present health and wellness related data digitally with proven effects on self-management of diseases. The aim of this study was to investigate whether there were differences in the intention to use (ITU) and perceived usefulness (PU) of two technologies allowing users to access the PHR, i.e. a kiosk system and a smart phone based app (access as usual). The study also aimed at modelling ITU and PU with multiple linear regressions. A total of 46 subject participated in the study who were randomly assigned to one of the two experimental groups (nkiosk = 22; napp = 24). The task for both groups was to digitise their “Medikationsplan” (medical record) and upload it to the PHR. There was no significant difference in ITU and PU between the two technologies. ITU could only be significantly explained by PU (R2 = .55, p < 0.001), while PU was determined by perceived ease of use and psychological factors (R2 = .64, p < 0.001). Severity of disease did not play any significant role. The German “Terminservice- und Versorgungsgesetz” underpins the importance and timeliness of this study. The assumption that both – the publicly accessible kiosk and the app – are equally acceptable for people of different gender, age and technology background demonstrates the opportunity to master a potential digital divide among the population and allows users to get access to their PHR in multiple ways.
Use of Emergency Departments by Frail Elderly Patients : Temporal Patterns and Case Complexity
(2019)
Emergency department (ED) care for frail elderly patients is associated with an increased use of resources due to their complex medical needs and frequently difficult psycho-social situation. To better target their needs with specially trained staff, it is vital to determine the times during which these particular patients present to the ED. Recent research was inconclusive regarding this question and the applied methods were limited to coarse time windows. Moreover, there is little research on time variation of frail ED patients’ case complexity. This study examines differences in arrival rates for frail vs. non-frail patients in detail and compares case complexity in frail patients within vs. outside of regular GP working hours. Arrival times and case variables (admission rate, ED length of stay [LOS], triage level and comorbidities) were extracted from the EHR of an ED in an urban German teaching hospital. We employed Poisson time series regression to determine patterns in hourly arrival rates over the week. Frail elderly patients presented more likely to the ED during already high frequented hours, especially at midday and in the afternoon. Case complexity for frail patients was significantly higher compared to non-frail patients, but varied marginally in time only with respect to triage level and ED LOS. The results suggest that frailty-attuned emergency care should be available in EDs during the busiest hours. Based on EHR data, hospitals thus can tailor their staff needs.
Despite similar policy goals, the adoption of eHealth practices took different paths in Austria (AT), Switzerland (CH), and Germany (GER). We seek to provide a rigorous analysis of the current state of hospitals by focusing on three key eHealth areas: electronic patient records (EPR), health information exchange (HIE), electronic patient communication. For validation and in order to gain better contextual insight we applied a mixed method approach by combining survey results from clinical directors with qualitative interview data from eHealth experts of all three countries. Across countries, EPR adoption rates were reported highest (AT: 52%, CH: 78%, GER: 50%), HIE-rates were partly lower (AT: 52%, CH: 14%, GER: 17%), and electronic patient communication was reported lowest overall (AT: 17%, CH: 8%, GER: 19%). Amongst others, results indicate patient awareness about eHealth to be equally weak across countries, which thus may be an important focal point of future policy initiatives.
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.
Although user participation may facilitate the realisation of IT innovations, various literature analyses show only minimal to moderate evidence for such effects possibly due to disregard of mediating factors. Against this background, this study examines the extent to which joint intrapreneurship of clinical leaders and IT leaders as well as a distinct innovation culture mediate the effect of user participation on hospitals’ IT innovativeness. IT innovativeness was measured by the availability and usability of IT functions and by the perceived ‘innovative power’ of a hospital. An empirical model was developed and tested with data from 168 clinical leaders and IT leaders who participated pairwise in a survey representing 84 German hospitals. Three parallel mediation analyses indicated that the participation of users could only lead to IT innovativeness if they were accompanied by intrapreneurial leadership on the part of clinical directors and IT leaders and if a pronounced innovation culture prevailed.
Background: IT adoption is a process that is influenced by different external and internal factors. This study aimed
1. to identify similarities and differences in the prevalence of medical and nursing IT systems in Austrian and German hospitals, and
2. to match these findings with characteristics of the two countries, in particular their healthcare system, and with features of the hospitals.
Methods: In 2007, all acute care hospitals in both countries received questionnaires with identical questions. 12.4% in Germany and 34.6% in Austria responded.
Results: The surveys revealed a consistent higher usage of nearly all clinical IT systems, especially nursing systems, but also PACS and electronic archiving systems, in Austrian than in German hospitals. These findings correspond with a significantly wider use of standardised nursing terminologies and a higher number of PC workstations on the wards (average 2.1 PCs in Germany, 3.2 PCs in Austria). Despite these differences, Austrian and German hospitals both reported a similar IT budget of 2.6% in Austria and 2.0% in Germany (median).
Conclusions: Despite the many similarities of the Austrian and German healthcare system there are distinct differences which may have led to a wider use of IT systems in Austrian hospitals. In nursing, the specific legal requirement to document nursing diagnoses in Austria may have stimulated the use of standardised terminologies for nursing diagnoses and the implementation of electronic nursing documentation systems. Other factors which correspond with the wider use of clinical IT systems in Austria are: good infrastructure of medical-technical devices, rigorous organisational changes which had led to leaner processes and to a lower length of stay, and finally a more IT friendly climate. As country size is the most pronounced difference between Germany and Austria it could be that smaller countries, such as Austria, are more ready to translate innovation into practice.
Background: The majority of health IT adoption research focuses on the later stages of the IT adoption process: namely on the implementation phase. The first stage, however, which is defined as the knowledge-stage, remains widely unobserved. Following Rogers’ Diffusion of Innovation Theory (DOI) this paper presents a research framework to examine the possible lack of shared IT awareness-knowledge, i.e. an information gradient, of two crucial stakeholders, the Chief Information Officer (CIO) and the Director of Nursing (DoN). This study shall answer the following research questions: (1.) Does this gradient exist? (2.) Which direction does it have? (3.) Are certain health IT (HIT) attributes associated with a potential gradient? (4.) Which determinants of diffusion go along with this gradient?
Method: Results of two surveys that focused on the topic “IT support of clinical workflows” from the viewpoint of CIOs and DoNs with corresponding datasets from 75 hospitals were used in a secondary data analysis. The gradient was operationalised by measuring the disagreement of CIOs and DoNs on the availability and implementation status of 29 IT functions. HIT attributes tested were relevance and market penetration of the IT functions, determinants of diffusion were inter-professional leadership and IT service density.
Results: The analysis revealed a significant disagreement on the availability of 9 out of 29 HIT functions. In 23 HIT functions, the CIOs reported a higher implementation status than the DoNs, which pointed to a trend for a unidirectional gradient. The disagreement was significantly lower when the relevance of the IT function was high. Both determinants of diffusion correlated significantly negative with the degree of disagreement.
Conclusion: This is the first study to empirically examine shared awareness-knowledge of two IT-stakeholders that are crucial for triggering IT adoption on the frontline level in hospitals. It could be shown that a gradient and thus a lack of shared awareness-knowledge existed and was associated with certain factors. In conclusion, hospitals should implement improved cooperation between IT staff and clinicians and IT service density when establishing the prerequisites for successful IT adoption processes.
Für die Versorgungsforschung ist wichtig, dass verteilte und heterogene Daten so integriert werden, dass sie offen für neue Analyse-Anforderungen und leicht um neue Datenquellen erweiterbar sind. Für die Integration von Versorgungsdaten werden bislang hauptsächlich Data-Warehouses eingesetzt, die Daten dimensional oder als Entity-Attribute-Value-Struktur (EAV) modellieren. Diese Datenmodelle sind jedoch entweder unflexibel oder weisen ein zu geringes Maß an Datenorganisation auf, was longitudinale Analysen erschwert. Wir haben den EAV-Ansatz um die Data-Vault-Modellierung ergänzt und damit die Datenstrukturen der Krankenhaus-Qualitätsberichte des Gemeinsamen Bundesausschusses (G-BA) modelliert sowie die Daten der Jahre 2011 bis 2015 integriert. Dies ermöglicht eine Historisierung der Metadaten für Merkmale, insbesondere der Qualitätsindikatoren, sowie ein hohes Maß an Erweiterbarkeit gegenüber neuen heterogenen Datenquellen. Der vorgeschlagene Ansatz erlaubt es, den Abstraktionsgrad für die zu modellierenden Entitäten frei zu wählen, so dass auch ein vollständig generisches EAV-Modell mit historisierten Metadaten erstellt werden kann.
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.
Hintergrund: Mangelhafte Informationsübermittlung führt bei der Überleitung Pflegebedürftiger zu einer Gefährdung von Sicherheit und Lebensqualität. Elektronische Instrumente können diese Situation grundsätzlich verbessern, werden jedoch bislang kaum eingesetzt. Ein Grund ist die fehlende Umsetzung von IT Standards.
Ziel der Arbeit: Ziel dieser Studie ist daher die technisch-organisatorische Machbarkeit, die Gebrauchstauglichkeit, Nützlichkeit und Vollständigkeit einer elektronisch unterstützten standardisierten Pflegeüberleitung zu untersuchen.
Material und Methoden: Zu diesem Zweck wurde eine Test-Telematikinfrastruktur aufgebaut, die die elektronische Gesundheitskarte einbezog, sowie ein HL7 CDA basiertes Überleitungsinstrument entwickelt, das den Informationsaustausch zwischen einem Krankenhaus und Pflegeheimen ermöglichte. Die Anwender bewerteten die Gebrauchstauglichkeit des Überleitungsinstruments, sowie die Nützlichkeit und Vollständigkeit von elektronischen und papierbasierten Überleitungen.
Ergebnisse: Es zeigte sich, dass das elektronische Überleitungsinstrument auf Basis des HL7 CDA Standards im Rahmen der Test-Telematikinfrastruktur technisch umgesetzt und von den Anwendern als gebrauchstauglich eingeschätzt werden konnte. Im Vergleich lieferte die elektronische Überleitung vollständigere und nützlichere Daten als die Papierform. Die Anwendung der elektronischen Gesundheitskarte (eGK) wurde von den Anwendern als hemmend eingestuft.
Diskussion: Die Studie unterstreicht die Machbarkeit, Bedeutung sowie die Barrieren von elektronischen Überleitungen von Pflegebedürftigen. Pflegende aus dem Krankenhaus- und Langzeitpflegebereich können eine auf dem HL7 CDA Standard ePflegebericht basierende Anwendung in ihre Abläufe integrieren und erhalten dadurch bessere und vollständigere Informationen. Zur langfristigen Sicherstellung der Versorgungskontinuität sollte der HL7 CDA Standard ePflegebericht Teil der deutschen Telematik-Infrastruktur werden.
Elektronisch unterstützte transsektorale Kommunikation im Gesundheitswesen ist eine der essentiellen Säulen von eHealth. Sie ist eine menschliche Handlung, die eine Verbesserung der Versorgung Einzelner und ganzer Bevölkerungsgruppen bewirken soll. Ethik bewertet menschliches Handeln in Bezug auf dessen Auswirkungen und die ihm zugrunde liegenden Werte und Normen. Dabei werden die Auswirkungen auf Individuen und Allgemeinheiten betrachtet. Im Gesundheits- und Sozialwesen gelten die Prinzipien der Autonomie, der Schadensverhütung, der Fürsorge und der Gerechtigkeit als Maßstäbe. Es gilt also die Fragen herauszuarbeiten, die an elektronische transsektorale Kommunikation aus ethischer Sicht gestellt werden müssen, um zu untersuchen, ob sie innerhalb der genannten Prinzipien ethischen Anforderungen genügt.
Aus den Ergebnissen einer systematischen Literaturrecherche wurden zunächst allgemein Aussagen zum Thema Information und Technologie im Zusammenhang mit Ethik extrahiert, und daraufhin geprüft, auf welche Fragen sie Antworten anbieten. Diese wurden innerhalb der genannten fünf Prinzipien als Fragen an elektronische transsektorale Kommunikation formuliert.
Aus den Aussagen der Literatur ließen sich sieben Fragen ableiten und den ethischen Prinzipien zuordnen, um mit ihnen elektronische transsektorale Kommunikation zu untersuchen. Auf diese Weise kann geprüft werden ob diese in der Lage sind, das Wohl Einzelner wie auch von Gemeinschaften im Gesundheitswesen zu fördern, wovon Betroffene, Professionelle und das Gesundheitssystem insgesamt profitieren könnten.
Background: Crowding in emergency departments (ED) has a negative impact on quality of care and can be averted by allocating additional resources based on predictive crowding models. However, there is a lack in effective external overall predictors, particularly those representing public activity.
Objectives: This study, therefore, examines public activity measured by regional road traffic flow as an external predictor of ED crowding in an urban hospital.
Methods: Seasonal autoregressive cross-validated models (SARIMA) were compared with respect to their forecasting error on ED crowding data.
Results: It could be shown that inclusion of inflowing road traffic into a SARIMA model effectively improved prediction errors.
Conclusion: The results provide evidence that circadian patterns of medical emergencies are connected to human activity levels in the region and could be captured by public monitoring of traffic flow. In order to corroborate this model, data from further years and additional regions need to be considered. It would also be interesting to study public activity by additional variables.
Wirtschaftsinformatik und Medizinische Informatik gehören zu den sogenannten Bindestrich-Informatik-Fächern, die sich mit der Anwendung der Methoden und Erkenntnisse der Informatik, aber auch mit der Weiterentwicklung solcher Methoden und Erkenntnisse für gewisse Anwendungsgebiete befassen. Auf einer Podiumsdiskussion der Jahrestagung 2018 der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Medizinische Informatik, Biometrie und Epidemiologie (GMDS) wurde für Wirtschaftsinformatik, Medizinische Informatik und Informatik analysiert wie sie zueinander stehen. Die Analyse erfolgte anhand von fünf Fragen:
1. Welche grundlegenden Ziele bestimmen die jeweilige wissenschaftliche Arbeit?
2. Wie ist der Praxisbezug ausgeprägt?
3. Inwieweit sind Besonderheiten von Medizin bzw. Ökonomie prägend für die jeweilige wissenschaftliche Arbeit?
4. Welche Rolle spielen Theoriefundierung und Evidenz?
5. Was können Wirtschaftsinformatik und Informatik von Medizinischer Informatik und Medizin lernen – und umgekehrt?
Die Analyse zeigt, dass die drei Disziplinen von einem systematischen wechselseitigen Austausch profitieren können. Das „Lernende Gesundheitssystem“ bietet Ansätze für einen entsprechenden Rahmen.
Background
Diabetes mellitus is a major global health issue with a growing prevalence. In this context, the number of diabetic complications is also on the rise, such as diabetic foot ulcers (DFU), which are closely linked to the risk of lower extremity amputation (LEA). Statistical prediction tools may support clinicians to initiate early tertiary LEA prevention for DFU patients. Thus, we designed Bayesian prediction models, as they produce transparent decision rules, quantify uncertainty intuitively and acknowledge prior available scientific knowledge.
Method
A logistic regression using observational collected according to the standardised PEDIS classification was utilised to compute the six-month amputation risk of DFU patients for two types of LEA: 1.) any-amputation and 2.) major-amputation. Being able to incorporate information which is available before the analysis, the Bayesian models were fitted following a twofold strategy. First, the designed prediction models waive the available information and, second, we incorporated the a priori available scientific knowledge into our models. Then, we evaluated each model with respect to the effect of the predictors and validity of the models. Next, we compared the performance of both models with respect to the incorporation of prior knowledge.
Results
This study included 237 patients. The mean age was 65.9 (SD 12.3), and 83.5% were male. Concerning the outcome, 31.6% underwent any- and 12.2% underwent a major-amputation procedure. The risk factors of perfusion, ulcer extent and depth revealed an impact on the outcomes, whereas the infection status and sensation did not. The major-amputation model using prior information outperformed the uninformed counterpart (AUC 0.765 vs AUC 0.790, Cohen’s d 2.21). In contrast, the models predicting any-amputation performed similarly (0.793 vs 0.790, Cohen’s d 0.22).
Conclusions
Both of the Bayesian amputation risk models showed acceptable prognostic values, and the major-amputation model benefitted from incorporating a priori information from a previous study. Thus, PEDIS serves as a valid foundation for a clinical decision support tool for the prediction of the amputation risk in DFU patients. Furthermore, we demonstrated the use of the available prior scientific information within a Bayesian framework to establish chains of knowledge.
Introduction: Handovers are a central process for ensuring information continuity in patient care and, therefore, possess a major influence on patient safety as errors due to poor handovers can lead to life-threatening events. Education to improve handovers and ensure safe patient care can be supported by using critical incident reporting systems (CIRS). The aim of the study is to perform a content analysis of a national CIRS-database with regard to identifying adverse events in handovers situations and to derive competencies for the development of continuing education from these findings.
Methods: A meta model served as a research framework to merge the empirical findings with the London protocol of analysing critical events and the Canadian framework of safety competencies. Relevant cases to be investigated were searched in a freely accessible German CIRS database.
Results: A total of 253 case descriptions were found and analysed. Team factors emerged as the most frequently reported influencing factors following the analysis of the London protocol. Communication errors and missing information as well as a lack of appropriate standards and processes appeared to be the main reasons for critical events to occur. Most of the events happened in units involving surgery and intensive care. A mapping of patient safety competences with the reasons for critical events was conducted in order to determine the practical, concrete and handover related competencies.
Conclusion: Data from a CIRS database and theoretical frameworks can be combined to extract meaningful information about patient safety risks in handover situations. The results are useful for developing curricula to improve handovers based on patient safety competencies.
Hintergrund
International stellen präventive Hausbesuche (PHB) ein implementiertes Konzept dar. Aufgrund des demografischen Wandels und andauernden Fachkräftemangels werden alternative Versorgungsformen wie PHB benötigt. Ziel der PHB ist, älteren Menschen den Verbleib in ihrem Zuhause und somit ihre präferierte Lebensform möglichst lange zu ermöglichen.
Methodik
Im Rahmen des vorliegenden Scoping-Reviews wurde eine datenbankgestützte, systematische Literaturreche durchgeführt, um einen Überblick der Literatur über PHB darzustellen. Der Fokus der Literaturanalyse lag auf den Effekten PHB, die aus internationalen und nationalen Reviews abgeleitet werden konnten, nationale Studien dienten der Analyse des Konzepts PHB. Es wurden 9 internationale und ein nationales Review sowie 7 nationale Studien eingeschlossen.
Ergebnisse
Die PHB erzielen heterogene Effekte auf die Mortalität, den stationären Krankenhausaufenthalt, die Pflegeheimaufnahme, das Sturzereignis, den funktionellen Status und die Lebensqualität. Die Ergebnisse sprechen tendenziell dafür, dass durch die PHB Pflegebedürftigkeit hinausgezögert oder gar vermieden werden kann.
Schlussfolgerungen
Weitere Forschungsarbeiten zu PHB sind notwendig, um das bisherige Wissen zu ergänzen und mögliche Konzeptanpassungen für eine größere Akzeptanz der Zielgruppe sowie die deutschlandweite Implementierung zu erreichen. Zudem ist die Politik gefordert, die Finanzierung innerhalb Deutschlands sicherzustellen. In Deutschland sind PHB noch nicht flächendeckend implementiert, obwohl verschiedene Projekte in unterschiedlichen Kontexten auf einen anhaltenden gesellschaftlichen Bedarf für und Interesse an PHB hindeuten.
Die meisten börsennotierten Gesellschaften haben ein Risikofrüherkennungssystem, das vom Abschlussprüfer ohne den Verweis auf schwerwiegende Mängel testiert wird. Tatsächlich zeigen Studien, dass die in der Praxis implementierten Systeme häufig ungeeignet sind, um an sich erkennbare bestandsgefährdende Entwicklungen zu identifizieren. Dies liegt an methodischen Schwächen, z. B. an einer fehlenden Betrachtung der Liquiditätswirkung von Risiken, einer vernachlässigten Analyse von Extremrisiken und insb. am Fehlen einer Risikoaggregation, die auch Kombinationseffekte berücksichtigt. Bei Insolvenzen, wie hier im Beispiel von Gerry Weber, lässt sich bei Betrachtung des dokumentierten Risikomanagementsystems erkennen, dass die gesetzlichen Anforderungen nicht erfüllt wurden. Um solche „überraschenden Insolvenzen“ zu vermeiden, ist es erforderlich, bessere Verfahren zu implementieren und durch Prüfer testieren zu lassen, was bisher nicht konsequent geschieht. Der Beitrag schlägt ein einfaches aber umfassendes Prüfschema für Risikofrüherkennungssysteme vor, das sowohl intern als auch von externen Prüfern verwendet werden kann.
Die Expertenstandards des DNQP haben sich als wichtiges Qualitätsinstrument in der Pflege etabliert und sind weit verbreitet. Wenig diskutiert sind Ansätze zur Untersuchung ihrer Wirksamkeit. In diesem Beitrag werden – ausgehend von der Untersuchung der Wirksamkeit des Expertenstandards zur Erhaltung und Förderung der Mobilität – Anforderungen an die Untersuchung der Wirksamkeit von Expertenstandards formuliert. Die Intention und Methodik von Expertenstandards werden dabei als Programm verstanden. Aufbauend auf einer Darstellung wesentlicher Aspekte von Programmen und Programmtheorien werden Hinweise zum Ausmaß und zu den Dimensionen von Evaluationsstrategien aufgezeigt und anhand von sieben Ebenen der Effektmessung konkretisiert. Um Aussagen darüber treffen zu können, warum die Arbeit mit Expertenstandards zu Ergebnissen geführt hat oder gesetzte Ziele nicht erreichen konnte, ist eine umfassend angelegte Evaluationsstrategie erforderlich.
Die Mobilität Studierender und Beschäftigter an Hochschulen trägt maßgeblich zu ihrem Einfluss auf Umwelt und Klima bei. Um mögliche negative Effekte zu minimieren, zielt die vorliegende Arbeit auf die Evaluation des aktuellen Mobilitätsverhaltens und die Initiierung von Aktivitäten zur nachhaltigen Mobilität an der Hochschule Mittweida (HSMW) und der Hochschule für Technik und Wirtschaft Dresden (HTW Dresden). Dafür wurde der aktuelle Status der Wege zur Hochschule und der Dienstreisen im Herbst 2019 mittels Online-Befragungen erfasst. Das Mobilitätsverhalten und zugrundeliegende Motive wurden analysiert. Basierend auf der Ist-Analyse wurden Ziele und Handlungsansätze zur Förderung nachhaltiger Mobilität für beide Hochschulen entwickelt.
Für beide untersuchten Hochschulen steht die Reduzierung der Kohlendioxid-Äquivalent-Emissionen im Fokus zum Thema nachhaltige Mobilität. Durch die verschiedenen Ausgangssituationen bezüglich der Mobilität auf den Wegen zur Hochschule wird jedoch der Schwerpunkt zur Umsetzung von Ansätzen zur Förderung nachhaltiger Mobilität unterschiedlich gesetzt. Für die HSMW werden verstärkt Handlungsansätze zur Förderung des öffentlichen Personen-Nahverkehrs und eines klimafreundlichen motorisierten Individualverkehrs entworfen (Beispiele sind Semester- und Jobtickets für Studierende und Beschäftigte). An der HTW Dresden haben Ansätze zum nichtmotorisierte Individualverkehr eine wichtige Priorität (z. B. die Beteiligung an kommunalen Initiativen zum Radverkehr in Dresden). Für die HSWM und die HTW Dresden werden außerdem Ansätze zur nachhaltigen Durchführung oder gar – sofern möglich – zur Vermeidung von Dienstreisen wie die Anerkennung der Reise- als Dienstzeit vorgestellt. Aufgrund der schwierigen Übertragbarkeit und der Chance viele Hochschulangehörige durch Befragungen partizipieren zu lassen, wird die individuelle Betrachtung der Ist-Situation auch zukünftig an anderen Hochschulen empfohlen.
Background: Pancreatic cancer is one of the malignant diseases with the highest cancer-specific mortality. At the time of diagnosis, life expectancy is often already very limited, as it is usually discovered late and in an advanced stage. Coping with cancer is a complex process. Coping strategies of patients with pancreatic cancer probably differ from those of other malignancies. Yet to date, there exists no pancreatic cancer-specific coping model.
Objective: The objective of this scoping review is to explore and characterize the academic literature related to coping processes in patients with pancreatic cancer.
Methods/Design: The JBI's three-step search strategy, combined with the Arksey and O'Malley framework, will be used to identify articles via PubMed/MEDLINE, CINAHL, Cochrane Library, Google Scholar, CAMbase, CareLit, CC Med, Scopus, and PsycARTICLES (Arksey & O'Malley, 2005; Peters et al., 2017). It follows the PRISMA guidelines for scoping reviews (Tricco et al., 2018). Primary and secondary studies and reviews which report on coping with pancreatic cancer (adenocarcinoma) in adults in English or German language will be included in this scoping review, regardless of publication date or study design.
Discussion: This scoping review will add new insights on coping with pancreatic cancer by summarizing current knowledge, and identifying research
Studiengänge zur Versorgungsforschung in Deutschland : aktueller Stand und zukünftige Perspektiven
(2020)
Ziel der Studie: Ziel dieser Untersuchung war es, die derzeit akkreditierten Versorgungsforschungsstudiengänge in Deutschland im Hinblick auf ihre Strukturdaten und Inhalte zu analysieren.
Methodik: Im Rahmen eines deskriptiven qualitativen Designs wurden die aktuellen Studienverlaufspläne, die Modulhandbücher und die Steckbriefe akkreditierter Masterstudiengänge der Versorgungsforschung inhaltsanalytisch ausgewertet.
Ergebnisse: Die 6 analysierten Studiengänge zeigen sich hinsichtlich ihrer strukturellen Merkmale und lehr-lerninhaltlichen Ausrichtung in den wesentlichen Punkten als homogen. Ziel aller Studiengänge ist es, fach- und disziplinübergreifende personale und soziale Kompetenzen zu fördern, um Versorgungsbedarfe im Gesundheitswesen zu identifizieren, Innovationen der Versorgung zu entwickeln, zu initiieren, zu evaluieren und kritisch zu reflektieren.
Schlussfolgerungen: Trotz ähnlicher Lehr-Lerninhalte bestehen spezifische Ausrichtungen, für die sich die Studierenden vor dem Hintergrund ihrer individuellen Präferenzen entscheiden können. Diese Ergebnisse könnten unter Berücksichtigung aktueller Diskurse und weiterer Erkenntnisse als Grundlage für Empfehlungen zur Entwicklung eines Kerncurriculums dienen.
Im Projekt „PartiziQ“1 wurden für verschiedene Beratungsangebote zu Pflegefragen auf Basis eines partizipativen Vorgehens Qualitätsanforderungen für die Beratung erarbeitet. Im Zentrum des Projekts standen die Nutzer/-innen der Beratungsangebote, die das erforderliche Qualitätsniveau definieren sollten. Es zeigte sich, dass die Nutzer/-innen an die strukturellen Rahmenbedingungen, die Kompetenzen der Berater/-innen, die Beratungsinhalte und die Gestaltung des Beratungsprozesses konkrete Erwartungen haben, die durch eine gleichberechtigte Zusammenarbeit explizit und für die qualitative Weiterentwicklung der Beratungslandschaft nutzbar gemacht werden können.
Diese Literaturstudie geht den Fragen nach, wie Familien mit einem chronisch kranken Kind im Prozess der Migration die Erkrankung des Kindes erleben, die Situation bewältigen und ob sich diese und Unterstützungsbedarfe von betroffenen Familien ohne Migration unterscheidet. Es zeigten sich Parallelen zur Situation betroffener Familien ohne Migration. Zusätzlich konnten Sprache, Wissensdefizite und kulturelle Einflüsse als Aspekte identifiziert werden, die das Erleben und Bewältigungshandeln speziell von Familien im Prozess der Migration beeinflussen können.
Das Delir ist eine Komplikation, die Patienten während ihrer stationären Behandlung erleiden können und trotz Screeninginstrumenten oftmals nicht erkannt werden. Das vorliegende Survey hatte zum Ziel, die Gütekriterien Handhabbarkeit, Akzeptanz und Relevanz aus Sicht der Anwender*innen zu erfragen. Basierend auf einer Literaturrecherche wurde ein standardisierter Fragebogen entwickelt. 45 Pflegenden von drei Pilotstationen haben teilgenommen. Die Auswertung erfolgte deskriptiv. Die Mehrheit (n=25) der Pflegenden hat die Nu-DESC als ein einfaches und kurzes Screeninginstrument wahrgenommen. Als problematisch stellte sich die Herleitung klinischer Konsequenzen aus dem Screening für die Pflegenden dar. 19 Pflegende sahen einen Mehrwert. Die Zielsetzung war jedoch nur der Hälfte der Befragten bekannt. Es wurde deutlich, dass die Nu-DESC von mehr als der Hälfte der Befragten nicht zur Steuerung der pflegerischen Versorgung wahrgenommen wird. Die Nu-DESC ist ein Screeninginstrument, welches – im Sinne der Handhabbarkeit - zumindest im Kontext der drei Stationen als geeignet gelten kann. In Bezug auf die Akzeptanz und Relevanz gibt es in den Daten eindeutige Hinweise für einen erweiterten Schulungsbedarf.
Die häusliche Pflege hat eine kontinuierlich hohe gesundheitswirtschaftliche, gesamtgesellschaftliche wie auch individuelle Bedeutung. Angehörige pflegebedürftiger Menschen benötigen eine bedürfnisorientierte und qualitätsgesicherte Unterstützung bei der häuslichen Pflege. Vor diesem Hintergrund ist zu fragen, welche Evidenz zu Unterstützungsangeboten im Sinne von "Respite Care" für Angehörige vorzufinden ist. Die vorliegende Literaturanalyse bezieht deutsche Studien ein und liefert ausgewählte Ansatzpunkte für den Aufbau, die Evaluation und Weiterentwicklung von Angeboten. Es konnten Bedingungen der Inanspruchnahme, Formen, mögliche Qualitätskriterien und Hinweise zur Wirkung von "Respite Care" bzw. Unterstützung identifiziert werden. Auf Basis der Ergebnisse sollten die Unterstützungsangebote mit Angehörigen gezielt abgestimmt und zukünftig anhand unterschiedlicher Forschungsdesigns überprüft werden.
Die COVID-19-Pandemie stellt qualitativ Forschende in Pflege- und Gesundheitswissenschaft vor besondere Herausforderungen: Persönliche Interviews von Angesicht zu Angesicht sind ethisch nur schwer zu rechtfertigen. Dieser Artikel beleuchtet methodische Aspekte sowie Vor- und Nachteile zweier alternativer Formen der Interviewdurchführung: des digitalen Videointerviews und des qualitativen Telefoninterviews. Beide Varianten können für die qualitative Interviewforschung eingesetzt werden, sofern technische und ethische Aspekte sowie Vorschriften des Datenschutzes ausreichend beachtet werden. Die Chancen hinsichtlich Durchführbarkeit, Praktikabilität, Anwendbarkeit, TeilnehmerInnenrekrutierung und Teilhabe sind als hoch einzuschätzen.
The study addresses staffing and workforce issues for home‐ and community‐based long‐term care in Germany. It is based on a study aimed at developing staffing recommendations for home‐care provider organisations. The study was commissioned within the regulation of the German long‐term care act. Following an exploratory literature search on staffing issues in home‐ and community‐based care qualitative interviews with 30 experts in home care were conducted. In addition, time needed for different interventions in homes of people in need of care (n = 129) was measured. Ethical approval for the study was obtained. The literature on the topic is limited. In Germany, no fixed staff‐to‐client ratio exists, but staffing is determined primarily by reimbursement policies, not by care recipients’ needs. The results of the interviews indicated that staffing ratios are not the main concern of home‐care providers. Experts stressed that general availability of staff with different qualification levels and the problems of existing regulation on services and their reimbursement are of higher concern. The measurement of time needed for selected interventions reveals the huge heterogeneity of home‐care service delivery and the difficulty of using a task‐based approach to determine staffing levels. Overall, the study shows that currently demand for home‐care exceeds supply. Staff shortage puts a risk to home care in Germany. Existing approaches of reimbursement‐driven determination of staffing levels have not been sufficient. A new balance between staffing, needs and reimbursement policies needs to be developed.