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Improving Digital Hospital Transformation: Development of an Outcomes-Based Infrastructure Maturity Assessment Framework

BACKGROUND: Digital transformation in health care is being driven by the need to improve quality, reduce costs, and enhance the patient experience of health care delivery. It does this through both the direct intervention of technology to create new diagnostic and treatment opportunities and also th...

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Autores principales: Williams, Patricia AH, Lovelock, Brendan, Cabarrus, Tony, Harvey, Marlon
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: JMIR Publications 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6329893/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30632973
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/12465
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author Williams, Patricia AH
Lovelock, Brendan
Cabarrus, Tony
Harvey, Marlon
author_facet Williams, Patricia AH
Lovelock, Brendan
Cabarrus, Tony
Harvey, Marlon
author_sort Williams, Patricia AH
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Digital transformation in health care is being driven by the need to improve quality, reduce costs, and enhance the patient experience of health care delivery. It does this through both the direct intervention of technology to create new diagnostic and treatment opportunities and also through the improved use of information to create more engaging and efficient care processes. OBJECTIVE: In a modern digital hospital, improved clinical and business processes are often driven through enhancing the information flows that support them. To understand an organization’s ability to transform their information flows requires a clear understanding of the capabilities of an organization’s information technology infrastructure. To date, hospital facilities have been challenged by the absence of uniform ways of describing this infrastructure that would enable them to benchmark where they are and create a vision of where they would like to be. While there is an industry assessment measure for electronic medical record (EMR) adoption using the Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society Analytics EMR Adoption Model, there is no equivalent for assessing the infrastructure and associated technology capabilities for digital hospitals. Our aim is to fill this gap, as hospital administrators and clinicians need to know how and why to invest in information infrastructure to support health information technology that benefits patient safety and care. METHODS: Based on an operational framework for the Capability Maturity Model, devised specifically for health care, we applied information use characteristics to define eight information systems maturity levels and associated technology infrastructure capabilities. These levels are mapped to user experiences to create a linkage between technology infrastructure and experience outcomes. Subsequently, specific technology capabilities are deconstructed to identify the technology features required to meet each maturity level. RESULTS: The resulting assessment framework clearly defines 164 individual capabilities across the five technology domains and eight maturity levels for hospital infrastructure. These level-dependent capabilities characterize the ability of the hospital’s information infrastructure to support the business of digital hospitals including clinical and administrative requirements. Further, it allows the addition of a scoring calculation for each capability, domain, and the overall infrastructure, and it identifies critical requirements to meet each of the maturity levels. CONCLUSIONS: This new Infrastructure Maturity Assessment framework will allow digital hospitals to assess the maturity of their infrastructure in terms of their digital transformation aligning to business outcomes and supporting the desired level of clinical and operational competency. It provides the ability to establish an international benchmark of hospital infrastructure performance, while identifying weaknesses in current infrastructure capability. Further, it provides a business case justification through increased functionality and a roadmap for subsequent digital transformation while moving from one maturity level to the next. As such, this framework will encourage and guide information-driven, digital transformation in health care.
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spelling pubmed-63298932019-02-11 Improving Digital Hospital Transformation: Development of an Outcomes-Based Infrastructure Maturity Assessment Framework Williams, Patricia AH Lovelock, Brendan Cabarrus, Tony Harvey, Marlon JMIR Med Inform Original Paper BACKGROUND: Digital transformation in health care is being driven by the need to improve quality, reduce costs, and enhance the patient experience of health care delivery. It does this through both the direct intervention of technology to create new diagnostic and treatment opportunities and also through the improved use of information to create more engaging and efficient care processes. OBJECTIVE: In a modern digital hospital, improved clinical and business processes are often driven through enhancing the information flows that support them. To understand an organization’s ability to transform their information flows requires a clear understanding of the capabilities of an organization’s information technology infrastructure. To date, hospital facilities have been challenged by the absence of uniform ways of describing this infrastructure that would enable them to benchmark where they are and create a vision of where they would like to be. While there is an industry assessment measure for electronic medical record (EMR) adoption using the Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society Analytics EMR Adoption Model, there is no equivalent for assessing the infrastructure and associated technology capabilities for digital hospitals. Our aim is to fill this gap, as hospital administrators and clinicians need to know how and why to invest in information infrastructure to support health information technology that benefits patient safety and care. METHODS: Based on an operational framework for the Capability Maturity Model, devised specifically for health care, we applied information use characteristics to define eight information systems maturity levels and associated technology infrastructure capabilities. These levels are mapped to user experiences to create a linkage between technology infrastructure and experience outcomes. Subsequently, specific technology capabilities are deconstructed to identify the technology features required to meet each maturity level. RESULTS: The resulting assessment framework clearly defines 164 individual capabilities across the five technology domains and eight maturity levels for hospital infrastructure. These level-dependent capabilities characterize the ability of the hospital’s information infrastructure to support the business of digital hospitals including clinical and administrative requirements. Further, it allows the addition of a scoring calculation for each capability, domain, and the overall infrastructure, and it identifies critical requirements to meet each of the maturity levels. CONCLUSIONS: This new Infrastructure Maturity Assessment framework will allow digital hospitals to assess the maturity of their infrastructure in terms of their digital transformation aligning to business outcomes and supporting the desired level of clinical and operational competency. It provides the ability to establish an international benchmark of hospital infrastructure performance, while identifying weaknesses in current infrastructure capability. Further, it provides a business case justification through increased functionality and a roadmap for subsequent digital transformation while moving from one maturity level to the next. As such, this framework will encourage and guide information-driven, digital transformation in health care. JMIR Publications 2019-01-11 /pmc/articles/PMC6329893/ /pubmed/30632973 http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/12465 Text en ©Patricia AH Williams, Brendan Lovelock, Tony Cabarrus, Marlon Harvey. Originally published in JMIR Medical Informatics (http://medinform.jmir.org), 11.01.2019. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work, first published in JMIR Medical Informatics, is properly cited. The complete bibliographic information, a link to the original publication on http://medinform.jmir.org/, as well as this copyright and license information must be included.
spellingShingle Original Paper
Williams, Patricia AH
Lovelock, Brendan
Cabarrus, Tony
Harvey, Marlon
Improving Digital Hospital Transformation: Development of an Outcomes-Based Infrastructure Maturity Assessment Framework
title Improving Digital Hospital Transformation: Development of an Outcomes-Based Infrastructure Maturity Assessment Framework
title_full Improving Digital Hospital Transformation: Development of an Outcomes-Based Infrastructure Maturity Assessment Framework
title_fullStr Improving Digital Hospital Transformation: Development of an Outcomes-Based Infrastructure Maturity Assessment Framework
title_full_unstemmed Improving Digital Hospital Transformation: Development of an Outcomes-Based Infrastructure Maturity Assessment Framework
title_short Improving Digital Hospital Transformation: Development of an Outcomes-Based Infrastructure Maturity Assessment Framework
title_sort improving digital hospital transformation: development of an outcomes-based infrastructure maturity assessment framework
topic Original Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6329893/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30632973
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/12465
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