Evaluating healthcare information systems through an "enterprise" perspective

[1]  B. Kaplan The Medical Computing “lag”: Perceptions of Barriers to the Application of Computers to Medicine , 1987, International Journal of Technology Assessment in Health Care.

[2]  K. Weick ENACTED SENSEMAKING IN CRISIS SITUATIONS[1] , 1988 .

[3]  Fred D. Davis Perceived Usefulness, Perceived Ease of Use, and User Acceptance of Information Technology , 1989, MIS Q..

[4]  B. Buchanan,et al.  Expanding the concept of medical information: an observational study of physicians' information needs. , 1992, Computers and biomedical research, an international journal.

[5]  Ephraim R. McLean,et al.  Information Systems Success: The Quest for the Dependent Variable , 1992, Inf. Syst. Res..

[6]  Henry J. Lowe,et al.  An Investigation of the Information Seeking Behavior of Medical Oncologists in Metropolitan Pittsburgh Using a Multimethod Approach , 1997, AMIA.

[7]  Rudy Hirschheim,et al.  Analysing information systems evaluation: another look at an old problem , 1998 .

[8]  Vimla L. Patel,et al.  Electronic communication and collaboration in a health care practice , 1998, Artif. Intell. Medicine.

[9]  R. Haynes,et al.  Effects of computer-based clinical decision support systems on physician performance and patient outcomes: a systematic review. , 1998, JAMA.

[10]  Paul Beynon-Davies,et al.  Human error and information systems failure: the case of the London ambulance service computer-aided despatch system project , 1999, Interact. Comput..

[11]  T. Wilson,et al.  Exploring the contexts of information behaviour , 1999 .

[12]  Athanasia Pouloudi,et al.  Information technology for collaborative advantage in healthcare revisited , 1999, Inf. Manag..

[13]  P. Beynon-Davies,et al.  When health information systems fail. , 1999, Topics in health information management.

[14]  Richard Heeks,et al.  Information Systems for Public Sector Management Working Paper Series Why Health Care Information Systems Succeed or Fail Why Health Care Information Systems Succeed or Fail , 2022 .

[15]  Richard Heeks,et al.  Understanding success and failure of Healthcare information systems , 2000 .

[16]  Sue Ziebland,et al.  Database of patients' experiences (DIPEx): a multi-media approach to sharing experiences and information , 2000, The Lancet.

[17]  D. Detmer Information technology for quality health care: a summary of United Kingdom and United States experiences , 2000, Quality in health care : QHC.

[18]  Marc Berg,et al.  Meeting patients' needs with patient information systems: potential benefits of qualitative research methods , 2001, Int. J. Medical Informatics.

[19]  Steven Jones,et al.  Understanding IS evaluation as a complex social process: a case study of a UK local authority , 2001, Eur. J. Inf. Syst..

[20]  Neil F. Doherty,et al.  An investigation of the factors affecting the successful treatment of organisational issues in systems development projects , 2001, Eur. J. Inf. Syst..

[21]  K. Mcgrath,et al.  The Golden Circle: a way of arguing and acting about technology in the London Ambulance Service , 2002, Eur. J. Inf. Syst..

[22]  Debra Howcroft,et al.  Re-conceptualising failure: social shaping meets IS research , 2002, Eur. J. Inf. Syst..

[23]  Paul Jen-Hwa Hu,et al.  Investigating healthcare professionals' decisions to accept telemedicine technology: an empirical test of competing theories , 2002, Inf. Manag..

[24]  Shoshana Zuboff,et al.  The Support Economy: Why Corporations Are Failing Individuals and the Next Episode of Capitalism , 2002 .

[25]  J. Wyatt,et al.  Evaluating computerised health information systems: hard lessons still to be learnt , 2003, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[26]  Ephraim R. McLean,et al.  The DeLone and McLean Model of Information Systems Success: A Ten-Year Update , 2003, J. Manag. Inf. Syst..

[27]  Claude Sicotte,et al.  The Computer-Based Patient Record Challenges Towards Timeless and Spaceless Medical Practice , 1998, Journal of Medical Systems.

[28]  C. Delpierre,et al.  A systematic review of computer-based patient record systems and quality of care: more randomized clinical trials or a broader approach? , 2004, International journal for quality in health care : journal of the International Society for Quality in Health Care.

[29]  Lois Quam,et al.  What can the UK and US health systems learn from each other? , 2005, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[30]  Marinos Themistocleous,et al.  EJIS special issue on making enterprise systems work , 2005, Eur. J. Inf. Syst..

[31]  Qingxiong Ma,et al.  The impact of service level on the acceptance of application service oriented medical records , 2005, Inf. Manag..

[32]  Bongsug Chae,et al.  The surface of emergence in systems development: agency, institutions, and large-scale information systems , 2005, Eur. J. Inf. Syst..

[33]  Neil F. Doherty,et al.  From technical to socio-technical change: tackling the human and organizational aspects of systems development projects , 2005, Eur. J. Inf. Syst..

[34]  S. Jansson,et al.  The impact of decentralised drug-budgets in Sweden - a survey of physicians' attitudes towards costs and cost-effectiveness. , 2006, Health policy.

[35]  Mun Y. Yi,et al.  Understanding information technology acceptance by individual professionals: Toward an integrative view , 2006, Inf. Manag..

[36]  David E. Avison,et al.  Time to rethink health care and ICT? , 2007, CACM.