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The technological, organizational and environmental determinants of adoption of mobile health applications (m-health) by hospitals in Kenya

INTRODUCTION: Sub-Saharan Africa lags in adoption of mobile health (m-health) applications and in leveraging m-health for sustainable development goals. There is a need for a comprehensive investigation of determinants of hospitals’ adoption of m-health in Sub-Saharan Africa to inform policies, prac...

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Autores principales: Ngongo, Bahati Prince, Ochola, Phares, Ndegwa, Joyce, Katuse, Paul
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6910672/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31834891
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0225167
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author Ngongo, Bahati Prince
Ochola, Phares
Ndegwa, Joyce
Katuse, Paul
author_facet Ngongo, Bahati Prince
Ochola, Phares
Ndegwa, Joyce
Katuse, Paul
author_sort Ngongo, Bahati Prince
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Sub-Saharan Africa lags in adoption of mobile health (m-health) applications and in leveraging m-health for sustainable development goals. There is a need for a comprehensive investigation of determinants of hospitals’ adoption of m-health in Sub-Saharan Africa to inform policies, practices and investments. METHODS: This investigation used a logit regression model to analyze the determinants of m-health adoption in Kenyan hospitals applying the Technological, Organizational and Environmental (TOE) framework and the Diffusion of Innovation (DOI) theory. A representative sample of 211 executives of Level 4–6 hospitals in 24 counties provided primary data on Patient-Centered (PC) and Facility-Centered (FC) m-health applications. RESULTS: Both PC and FC m-health adoption were predicted by competition for patients (PC p = 0.041, FC p = 0.021), IT human resource capacity (PC p = 0.048, FC p = 0.037), and hospital pursuit of market growth through technological leadership (PC p = 0.010, FC p = 0.020). Further determinants of PC m-health adoption included hospital access to slack financial resources (p = 0.006), acquisition strategy (p = 0.011), compatibility with the hospital systems (p = 0.015), trialability (p = 0.019), medical insurance company support (p = 0.025),patient pressure (p = 0.036), and perceived effect of global medical tourism (p = 0.039). FC m-health adoption was predicted by hospital size (p = 0.008), ICT infrastructure capacity (p = 0.041), and government support (p = 0.013). CONCLUSION: A differentiated approach is required to scale up m-health adoption. PC m-health requires emphasis on establishing national and regional compatibility and interoperability, developing trialability processes and validation mechanisms, incentivizing patient competition and mobility, establishing innovative and cost-effective acquisition strategies, and ensuring integration of digital services within national insurance schemes and policies. These policies require support from patients and communities to drive demand and spur investment in adequate IT human resources to maintain reliability. Pilot PC m-health projects should prioritize hospitals with slack financial resources, while FC m-health should target large facility size. FC m-health applications are more complex and costly than PC, requiring government incentives to trigger hospital investments and national investment in ICT infrastructure. Investors and hospital managers should integrate m-health into market growth strategies for sustainable m-health scale-up in Kenya and beyond.
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spelling pubmed-69106722019-12-27 The technological, organizational and environmental determinants of adoption of mobile health applications (m-health) by hospitals in Kenya Ngongo, Bahati Prince Ochola, Phares Ndegwa, Joyce Katuse, Paul PLoS One Research Article INTRODUCTION: Sub-Saharan Africa lags in adoption of mobile health (m-health) applications and in leveraging m-health for sustainable development goals. There is a need for a comprehensive investigation of determinants of hospitals’ adoption of m-health in Sub-Saharan Africa to inform policies, practices and investments. METHODS: This investigation used a logit regression model to analyze the determinants of m-health adoption in Kenyan hospitals applying the Technological, Organizational and Environmental (TOE) framework and the Diffusion of Innovation (DOI) theory. A representative sample of 211 executives of Level 4–6 hospitals in 24 counties provided primary data on Patient-Centered (PC) and Facility-Centered (FC) m-health applications. RESULTS: Both PC and FC m-health adoption were predicted by competition for patients (PC p = 0.041, FC p = 0.021), IT human resource capacity (PC p = 0.048, FC p = 0.037), and hospital pursuit of market growth through technological leadership (PC p = 0.010, FC p = 0.020). Further determinants of PC m-health adoption included hospital access to slack financial resources (p = 0.006), acquisition strategy (p = 0.011), compatibility with the hospital systems (p = 0.015), trialability (p = 0.019), medical insurance company support (p = 0.025),patient pressure (p = 0.036), and perceived effect of global medical tourism (p = 0.039). FC m-health adoption was predicted by hospital size (p = 0.008), ICT infrastructure capacity (p = 0.041), and government support (p = 0.013). CONCLUSION: A differentiated approach is required to scale up m-health adoption. PC m-health requires emphasis on establishing national and regional compatibility and interoperability, developing trialability processes and validation mechanisms, incentivizing patient competition and mobility, establishing innovative and cost-effective acquisition strategies, and ensuring integration of digital services within national insurance schemes and policies. These policies require support from patients and communities to drive demand and spur investment in adequate IT human resources to maintain reliability. Pilot PC m-health projects should prioritize hospitals with slack financial resources, while FC m-health should target large facility size. FC m-health applications are more complex and costly than PC, requiring government incentives to trigger hospital investments and national investment in ICT infrastructure. Investors and hospital managers should integrate m-health into market growth strategies for sustainable m-health scale-up in Kenya and beyond. Public Library of Science 2019-12-13 /pmc/articles/PMC6910672/ /pubmed/31834891 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0225167 Text en © 2019 Ngongo et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Ngongo, Bahati Prince
Ochola, Phares
Ndegwa, Joyce
Katuse, Paul
The technological, organizational and environmental determinants of adoption of mobile health applications (m-health) by hospitals in Kenya
title The technological, organizational and environmental determinants of adoption of mobile health applications (m-health) by hospitals in Kenya
title_full The technological, organizational and environmental determinants of adoption of mobile health applications (m-health) by hospitals in Kenya
title_fullStr The technological, organizational and environmental determinants of adoption of mobile health applications (m-health) by hospitals in Kenya
title_full_unstemmed The technological, organizational and environmental determinants of adoption of mobile health applications (m-health) by hospitals in Kenya
title_short The technological, organizational and environmental determinants of adoption of mobile health applications (m-health) by hospitals in Kenya
title_sort technological, organizational and environmental determinants of adoption of mobile health applications (m-health) by hospitals in kenya
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6910672/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31834891
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0225167
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