Systematic Inquiry

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Wanda Pratt - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • Systematic Inquiry for design of health care information systems an example of elicitation of the patient stakeholder perspective
    Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences, 2015
    Co-Authors: Jordan Eschler, Katie Oleary, Logan Kendall, James D Ralston, Wanda Pratt
    Abstract:

    The electronic health record (EHR) has evolved as a tool primarily dictated by the needs of health care clinicians and organizations, providing important functions supporting day to day work in health care. However, the EHR and supporting information systems contain the potential to incorporate patient workflows and tasks as well. Integrating patient needs into existing EHR and health management systems will require understanding of patients as direct stakeholders, necessitating observation and exploration of in situ EHR use by patients to envision new opportunities for future systems. In this paper, we describe the application of a theoretical framework (Vicente, 1999) to organize qualitative data during a multi-stage research study into patient engagement with EHRs. By using this method of Systematic Inquiry, we have more effectively elicited patient stakeholder needs and goals to inform the design of future health care information systems.

  • HICSS - Systematic Inquiry for Design of Health Care Information Systems: An Example of Elicitation of the Patient Stakeholder Perspective
    Proceedings of the ... Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences. Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences, 2015
    Co-Authors: Jordan Eschler, Logan Kendall, James D Ralston, Katie O'leary, Wanda Pratt
    Abstract:

    The electronic health record (EHR) has evolved as a tool primarily dictated by the needs of health care clinicians and organizations, providing important functions supporting day to day work in health care. However, the EHR and supporting information systems contain the potential to incorporate patient workflows and tasks as well. Integrating patient needs into existing EHR and health management systems will require understanding of patients as direct stakeholders, necessitating observation and exploration of in situ EHR use by patients to envision new opportunities for future systems. In this paper, we describe the application of a theoretical framework (Vicente, 1999) to organize qualitative data during a multi-stage research study into patient engagement with EHRs. By using this method of Systematic Inquiry, we have more effectively elicited patient stakeholder needs and goals to inform the design of future health care information systems.

Kjeld Høgsbro - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • Contradictions and conflicts in brain injury rehabilitation. A Systematic Inquiry into models of rehabilitation
    Scandinavian Journal of Disability Research, 2016
    Co-Authors: Chalotte Glintborg, Nuri Cayuelas Mateu, Kjeld Høgsbro
    Abstract:

    ABSTRACTThe approach of addressing biology as the sole process to recovery after a brain injury has been criticized since the 1980s. Based on the bio-psycho-social model (BPSM), new national guidelines stipulate that brain injury rehabilitation should be based on dynamic approaches and interactive principles. Proceeding from a Systematic Inquiry into Models for Rehabilitation (SIMREB) and Institutional Ethnography approach, we identify possible contradictions, barriers and conflicts hampering the implementation of the BPSM with reference to basic discourse conflicts within the field of acquired brain injury rehabilitation. We find four main barriers within practice that may hamper the implementation of the new paradigm: institutional premises that sustain biological discourses, difficulty of predicting recovery, lack of interdisciplinary collaboration and a general ignorance regarding the life-world of people with ABI. The analysis is based on fieldwork in a Danish Neuro-Rehabilitation Centre.

  • SIMREB – towards a Systematic Inquiry into models for rehabilitation
    Scandinavian Journal of Disability Research, 2010
    Co-Authors: Kjeld Høgsbro
    Abstract:

    Systematic Inquiry into Models for Rehabilitation (SIMREB) is a framework for designing evaluations of rehabilitation models specifically intended for persons who are only to a limited extent regarded as being capable to speak for themselves and who, therefore, are often entrusted to a professional assessment of their needs. The article identifies the general elements in this model. By looking at both the epistemological level and the practice level from a professional as well as a user perspective the model taps into discourse analysis, institutional ethnography and a wide tradition of evaluation research. The article uses an evaluation of a rehabilitation programme for people with traumatic brain injury (TBI) as an example to illustrate the different elements of the SIMREB model.

  • simreb towards a Systematic Inquiry into models for rehabilitation
    Scandinavian Journal of Disability Research, 2010
    Co-Authors: Kjeld Høgsbro
    Abstract:

    Systematic Inquiry into Models for Rehabilitation (SIMREB) is a framework for designing evaluations of rehabilitation models specifically intended for persons who are only to a limited extent regarded as being capable to speak for themselves and who, therefore, are often entrusted to a professional assessment of their needs. The article identifies the general elements in this model. By looking at both the epistemological level and the practice level from a professional as well as a user perspective the model taps into discourse analysis, institutional ethnography and a wide tradition of evaluation research. The article uses an evaluation of a rehabilitation programme for people with traumatic brain injury (TBI) as an example to illustrate the different elements of the SIMREB model.

Jordan Eschler - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • Systematic Inquiry for design of health care information systems an example of elicitation of the patient stakeholder perspective
    Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences, 2015
    Co-Authors: Jordan Eschler, Katie Oleary, Logan Kendall, James D Ralston, Wanda Pratt
    Abstract:

    The electronic health record (EHR) has evolved as a tool primarily dictated by the needs of health care clinicians and organizations, providing important functions supporting day to day work in health care. However, the EHR and supporting information systems contain the potential to incorporate patient workflows and tasks as well. Integrating patient needs into existing EHR and health management systems will require understanding of patients as direct stakeholders, necessitating observation and exploration of in situ EHR use by patients to envision new opportunities for future systems. In this paper, we describe the application of a theoretical framework (Vicente, 1999) to organize qualitative data during a multi-stage research study into patient engagement with EHRs. By using this method of Systematic Inquiry, we have more effectively elicited patient stakeholder needs and goals to inform the design of future health care information systems.

  • HICSS - Systematic Inquiry for Design of Health Care Information Systems: An Example of Elicitation of the Patient Stakeholder Perspective
    Proceedings of the ... Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences. Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences, 2015
    Co-Authors: Jordan Eschler, Logan Kendall, James D Ralston, Katie O'leary, Wanda Pratt
    Abstract:

    The electronic health record (EHR) has evolved as a tool primarily dictated by the needs of health care clinicians and organizations, providing important functions supporting day to day work in health care. However, the EHR and supporting information systems contain the potential to incorporate patient workflows and tasks as well. Integrating patient needs into existing EHR and health management systems will require understanding of patients as direct stakeholders, necessitating observation and exploration of in situ EHR use by patients to envision new opportunities for future systems. In this paper, we describe the application of a theoretical framework (Vicente, 1999) to organize qualitative data during a multi-stage research study into patient engagement with EHRs. By using this method of Systematic Inquiry, we have more effectively elicited patient stakeholder needs and goals to inform the design of future health care information systems.

S V Subramanian - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • social environment and physical activity a review of concepts and evidence
    Social Science & Medicine, 2006
    Co-Authors: Lorna Haughton Mcneill, Matthew W Kreuter, S V Subramanian
    Abstract:

    The rapidly growing and evolving literature on the social environment and its influence on health outcomes currently lacks a clear taxonomy of dimensions of the social environment and the differing mechanisms through which each influences health-related behavior. This paper identifies five dimensions of the social environment--social support and social networks, socioeconomic position and income inequality, racial discrimination, social cohesion and social capital, and neighborhood factors--and considers each in the context of physical activity to illustrate important differences between them. Increasing the specificity of terminology and methods in social environmental research on health will enable more Systematic Inquiry and accelerate the rate of scientific discovery in this important area.

Logan Kendall - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • Systematic Inquiry for design of health care information systems an example of elicitation of the patient stakeholder perspective
    Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences, 2015
    Co-Authors: Jordan Eschler, Katie Oleary, Logan Kendall, James D Ralston, Wanda Pratt
    Abstract:

    The electronic health record (EHR) has evolved as a tool primarily dictated by the needs of health care clinicians and organizations, providing important functions supporting day to day work in health care. However, the EHR and supporting information systems contain the potential to incorporate patient workflows and tasks as well. Integrating patient needs into existing EHR and health management systems will require understanding of patients as direct stakeholders, necessitating observation and exploration of in situ EHR use by patients to envision new opportunities for future systems. In this paper, we describe the application of a theoretical framework (Vicente, 1999) to organize qualitative data during a multi-stage research study into patient engagement with EHRs. By using this method of Systematic Inquiry, we have more effectively elicited patient stakeholder needs and goals to inform the design of future health care information systems.

  • HICSS - Systematic Inquiry for Design of Health Care Information Systems: An Example of Elicitation of the Patient Stakeholder Perspective
    Proceedings of the ... Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences. Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences, 2015
    Co-Authors: Jordan Eschler, Logan Kendall, James D Ralston, Katie O'leary, Wanda Pratt
    Abstract:

    The electronic health record (EHR) has evolved as a tool primarily dictated by the needs of health care clinicians and organizations, providing important functions supporting day to day work in health care. However, the EHR and supporting information systems contain the potential to incorporate patient workflows and tasks as well. Integrating patient needs into existing EHR and health management systems will require understanding of patients as direct stakeholders, necessitating observation and exploration of in situ EHR use by patients to envision new opportunities for future systems. In this paper, we describe the application of a theoretical framework (Vicente, 1999) to organize qualitative data during a multi-stage research study into patient engagement with EHRs. By using this method of Systematic Inquiry, we have more effectively elicited patient stakeholder needs and goals to inform the design of future health care information systems.