An empirically-derived approach for investigating Health Information Technology: the Elementally Entangled Organisational Communication (EEOC) framework

BackgroundThe purpose of this paper is to illustrate the Elementally Entangled Organisational Communication (EEOC) framework by drawing on a set of three case studies which assessed the impact of new Health Information Technology (HIT) on a pathology service. The EEOC framework was empirically developed as a tool to tackle organisational communication challenges in the implementation and evaluation of health information systems.MethodsThe framework was synthesised from multiple research studies undertaken across a major metropolitan hospital pathology service during the period 2005 to 2008. These studies evaluated the impact of new HIT systems in pathology departments (Laboratory Information System) and an Emergency Department (Computerised Provider Order Entry) located in Sydney, Australia.ResultsKey dimensions of EEOC are illustrated by the following case studies: 1) the communication infrastructure between the Blood Bank and the ward for the coordination and distribution of blood products; 2) the organisational environment in the Clinical Chemistry and Haematology departments and their attempts to organise, plan and control the processing of laboratory specimens; and 3) the temporal make up of the organisation as revealed in changes to the way the Central Specimen Reception allocated, sequenced and synchronised work tasks.ConclusionsThe case studies not only highlight the pre-existing communication architecture within the organisation but also the constitutive role communication plays in the way organisations go about addressing their requirements. HIT implementation involves a mutual transformation of the organisation and the technology. This is a vital consideration because of the dangers associated with poor organisational planning and implementation of HIT, and the potential for unintended adverse consequences, workarounds and risks to the quality and safety of patient care. The EEOC framework aims to account for the complex range of contextual factors and triggers that play a role in the success or otherwise of new HITs, and in the realisation of their innovation potential.

[1]  Andrew Georgiou,et al.  Computerized provider order entry systems – Research imperatives and organizational challenges facing pathology services , 2010, Journal of pathology informatics.

[2]  Andrew Georgiou,et al.  Pathology's front line - a comparison of the experiences of electronic ordering in the clinical chemistry and haematology departments. , 2007, Studies in health technology and informatics.

[3]  Ray Pawson,et al.  Evidence-based policy: a realist perspective. , 2006 .

[4]  Marshall Scott Poole,et al.  Handbook of Organizational Change and Innovation , 2004 .

[5]  M. Berg,et al.  ICT in health care: sociotechnical approaches. , 2003, Methods of Information in Medicine.

[6]  G. Gonzales,et al.  Information Technologies , 2019, Encyclopedia of Education and Information Technologies.

[7]  Patricia Bazeley,et al.  The Nvivo Qualitative Project Book , 2000 .

[8]  Patricia Flatley Brennan Editorial: Standing in the Shadows of Theory , 2008, J. Am. Medical Informatics Assoc..

[9]  et al.,et al.  An interdisciplinary team communication framework and its application to healthcare 'e-teams' systems design , 2009, BMC Medical Informatics Decis. Mak..

[10]  Charlene R. Weir,et al.  Research Paper: A Cognitive Task Analysis of Information Management Strategies in a Computerized Provider Order Entry Environment , 2007, J. Am. Medical Informatics Assoc..

[11]  Fleur Fritz,et al.  Mapping Turnaround Times (TAT) to a Generic Timeline: A Systematic Review of TAT Definitions in Clinical Domains , 2011, BMC Medical Informatics Decis. Mak..

[12]  W. Orlikowski Sociomaterial Practices: Exploring Technology at Work , 2007 .

[13]  D. Coplen Types of Unintended Consequences Related to Computerized Provider Order Entry , 2007 .

[14]  Linda L. Putnam,et al.  Metaphors of Communication and Organization , 1999 .

[15]  H. Lee,et al.  Time and information technology: monochronicity, polychronicity and temporal symmetry , 1999 .

[16]  David J. Will A realist theory of science , 1981, Medical History.

[17]  K. Sutcliffe,et al.  Communication Failures: An Insidious Contributor to Medical Mishaps , 2004, Academic medicine : journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges.

[18]  Andrew Georgiou,et al.  Time matters--a theoretical and empirical examination of the temporal landscape of a hospital pathology service and the impact of e-health. , 2011, Social science & medicine.

[19]  Andrew Sayer,et al.  Method in Social Science: A Realist Approach , 1984 .

[20]  Liron Pantanowitz,et al.  Medical laboratory informatics. , 2007, Clinics in laboratory medicine.

[21]  C. Anandan,et al.  The Impact of eHealth on the Quality and Safety of Health Care: A Systematic Overview , 2011, PLoS medicine.

[22]  S. Reeves,et al.  Why use theories in qualitative research? , 2008, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[23]  Richard A. Howey Valuing technology , 2004 .

[24]  D. Blumenthal,et al.  The benefits of health information technology: a review of the recent literature shows predominantly positive results. , 2011, Health affairs.

[25]  Christopher Nemeth,et al.  Crafting information technology solutions, not experiments, for the emergency department. , 2004, Academic emergency medicine : official journal of the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine.

[26]  Alan Clarke Evidence-Based Evaluation in Different Professional Domains: Similarities, Differences and Challenges , 2006 .

[27]  E. Eisenberg,et al.  Organizational Communication: Balancing Creativity and Constraint , 1997 .

[28]  P. Shekelle,et al.  Systematic Review: Impact of Health Information Technology on Quality, Efficiency, and Costs of Medical Care , 2006, Annals of Internal Medicine.

[29]  Andrew Georgiou,et al.  Health professional networks as a vector for improving healthcare quality and safety: a systematic review , 2011, BMJ quality & safety.

[30]  Raghu Garud,et al.  The innovation journey , 1999 .

[31]  Paula Hyde,et al.  Culture and climate in health care organizations , 2010 .

[32]  D. Whitehead Case Study Research Design and Methods, 3rd edition , 2003 .

[33]  Klaus A. Kuhn,et al.  Health information systems challenges: the Heidelberg conference and the future , 2003, Int. J. Medical Informatics.

[34]  Craig E. Kuziemsky,et al.  A review on systematic reviews of health information system studies , 2010, J. Am. Medical Informatics Assoc..

[35]  M Berg,et al.  Integrating Quantitative and Qualitative Methods in Patient Care Information System Evaluation , 2003, Methods of Information in Medicine.

[36]  Bendik Bygstad,et al.  Generative mechanisms for innovation in information infrastructures , 2010, Inf. Organ..

[37]  Andrew Georgiou,et al.  What effect does electronic ordering have on the organisational dynamics of a hospital pathology service? , 2010, MedInfo.

[38]  Jennifer Caroline Greene,et al.  Handbook of evaluation : policies, programs and practices , 2006 .

[39]  Marc Berg,et al.  Implementing information systems in health care organizations: myths and challenges , 2001, Int. J. Medical Informatics.

[40]  N. Carter General and Industrial Management , 1986 .

[41]  A. Sayer Method in Social Science , 1992 .

[42]  Bob Carter,et al.  Making realism work : realist social theory and empirical research , 2004 .

[43]  R. Wears,et al.  Computer technology and clinical work: still waiting for Godot. , 2005, JAMA.

[44]  Howard H. Greenbaum,et al.  Organizational Communication , 1988, The SAGE Encyclopedia of Higher Education.

[45]  C. van Walraven,et al.  Population-based study of repeat laboratory testing. , 2003, Clinical chemistry.

[46]  T. Greenhalgh,et al.  Why Do Evaluations of eHealth Programs Fail? An Alternative Set of Guiding Principles , 2010, PLoS medicine.

[47]  Elizabeth J. Davidson,et al.  Examining the organizational implications of IT use in hospital-based health care: a case study of computerized order entry , 1999, Proceedings of the 32nd Annual Hawaii International Conference on Systems Sciences. 1999. HICSS-32. Abstracts and CD-ROM of Full Papers.

[48]  Johanna I. Westbrook,et al.  Information technology in health care: Socio-technical approaches , 2010, Int. J. Medical Informatics.

[49]  Linda L. Putnam,et al.  Building Theories of Organization : The Constitutive Role of Communication , 2008 .

[50]  R. Yin Case Study Research: Design and Methods , 1984 .

[51]  Richard J. Holden,et al.  A theoretical model of health information technology usage behaviour with implications for patient safety , 2009, Behav. Inf. Technol..

[52]  K. Weick The social psychology of organizing , 1969 .

[53]  D. Bates,et al.  Global priorities for patient safety research , 2009, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[54]  Timothy Kuhn,et al.  1 Constitutional Amendments: “Materializing” Organizational Communication , 2009 .

[55]  Jakob E. Bardram,et al.  Temporal Coordination –On Time and Coordination of CollaborativeActivities at a Surgical Department , 2000, Computer Supported Cooperative Work (CSCW).

[56]  Johanna I Westbrook,et al.  Test turnaround times and mortality rates 12 and 24 months after the introduction of a computerised provider order entry system. , 2009, Methods of information in medicine.

[57]  James R Cook Engaged Scholarship: A Guide for Organizational and Social Research , 2014 .

[58]  Joep Cornelissen,et al.  Bridging Corporate and Organizational Communication: Review, Development and a Look to the Future , 2011 .

[59]  Barry Spiker,et al.  Organizational Communication: Perspectives and Trends , 2007 .

[60]  Monique W. M. Jaspers,et al.  Effects of clinical decision-support systems on practitioner performance and patient outcomes: a synthesis of high-quality systematic review findings , 2011, J. Am. Medical Informatics Assoc..

[61]  E. Coiera When conversation is better than computation. , 2000, Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association : JAMIA.

[62]  Jonathon R. B. Halbesleben,et al.  Research Paper: Technology Implementation and Workarounds in the Nursing Home , 2008, J. Am. Medical Informatics Assoc..

[63]  Pamela Jordan Basics of qualitative research: Grounded theory procedures and techniques , 1994 .

[64]  Stewart Clegg,et al.  Managing organizations : current issues , 1999 .

[65]  Linda L. Putnam,et al.  Introduction: Communication constitutes organization , 2008 .

[66]  Norman K. Denzin,et al.  The elephant in the living room: or extending the conversation about the politics of evidence , 2009 .

[67]  Fadhel Kaboub Realistic Evaluation , 2004 .

[68]  Huey-tsyh Chen Theory-driven evaluations , 1990 .

[69]  K. Weick FROM SENSEMAKING IN ORGANIZATIONS , 2021, The New Economic Sociology.

[70]  J S Ash,et al.  Order Creation and Communication in Healthcare , 2003, Methods of Information in Medicine.

[71]  Heejin Lee,et al.  Time in Organizational Studies: Towards a New Research Direction , 1999 .

[72]  Craig Standing,et al.  An interpretive approach to evaluating information systems: A content, context, process framework , 2006, Eur. J. Oper. Res..

[73]  W. Chismar,et al.  The interaction of institutionally triggered and technology-triggered social structure change: an investigation of computerized physician order entry , 2007 .

[74]  Marc Berg,et al.  Viewpoint Paper: Some Unintended Consequences of Information Technology in Health Care: The Nature of Patient Care Information System-related Errors , 2003, J. Am. Medical Informatics Assoc..

[75]  Anselm L. Strauss,et al.  Qualitative Analysis For Social Scientists , 1987 .

[76]  G. Kuperman,et al.  Computer Physician Order Entry: Benefits, Costs, and Issues , 2003, Annals of Internal Medicine.

[77]  Lorelei Lingard,et al.  Grounded theory, mixed methods, and action research , 2008, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[78]  Paul M. Leonardi,et al.  Materiality and Change: Challenges to Building Better Theory about Technology and Organizing , 2008, Inf. Organ..

[79]  D. Swinglehurst,et al.  Tensions and paradoxes in electronic patient record research: a systematic literature review using the meta-narrative method. , 2009, The Milbank quarterly.

[80]  Andrew Georgiou,et al.  Model Formulation: Multimethod Evaluation of Information and Communication Technologies in Health in the Context of Wicked Problems and Sociotechnical Theory , 2007, J. Am. Medical Informatics Assoc..

[81]  D. Anthony Evidence-based Policy: A Realist Perspective , 2007 .

[82]  Elizabeth J. Davidson,et al.  Analyzing genre of organizational communication in clinical information systems , 2000, Inf. Technol. People.

[83]  Linda L. Putnam,et al.  Handbook of Organizational Communication: An Interdisciplinary Perspective , 1987 .

[84]  J. Braithwaite,et al.  The development, design, testing, refinement, simulation and application of an evaluation framework for communities of practice and social-professional networks , 2009, BMC health services research.

[85]  Andrew Georgiou,et al.  A realist evaluation of the role of communities of practice in changing healthcare practice , 2011, Implementation science : IS.

[86]  S. Ackroyd Methodology for management and organisation studies: some implications of critical realism , 2004 .

[87]  J. Nunamaker,et al.  Proceedings of the 32nd Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences , 1999 .

[88]  Jeffrey Braithwaite,et al.  Will information and communication technology disrupt the health system and deliver on its promise? , 2010, The Medical journal of Australia.

[89]  A. Localio,et al.  Role of computerized physician order entry systems in facilitating medication errors. , 2005, JAMA.

[90]  K. Miller Organizational Communication: Approaches and Processes , 2002 .

[91]  Sylwia Męcfal Recenzja książki. Robert K. yin, Case Study Research. Design and Methods (fourth Edition), thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications, 2009 , 2012 .

[92]  Derek Layder Sociological Practice: Linking Theory and Social Research , 1998 .

[93]  Kim M. Unertl,et al.  Traversing the many paths of workflow research: developing a conceptual framework of workflow terminology through a systematic literature review , 2010, J. Am. Medical Informatics Assoc..

[94]  Andrew Georgiou,et al.  Safety and efficiency considerations for the introduction of electronic ordering in a blood bank. , 2009, Archives of pathology & laboratory medicine.

[95]  Robert D. McPhee,et al.  The communicative constitution of organizations: A framework for explanation , 2008 .

[96]  D. Skinner,et al.  Valuing Technology: Organisations, Culture and Change , 1999 .

[97]  C. Aydin Occupational adaptation to computerized medical information systems. , 1989, Journal of health and social behavior.

[98]  J. D. Johnson,et al.  Organizational Communication Structure , 1993 .