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Estimating the Impacts of Hospitals' Organisational and Geographical Characteristics on the Adoption of Health Information Technology in Mongolian Hospitals
BACKGROUND: The adoption of health information technology (HIT) is an important measure for improving healthcare quality and safety, which is affected by many hospital factors, but it has not yet been estimated in the Mongolian hospital sectors. This study examines how hospitals' organisational...
Autores principales: | , , , |
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
Hindawi
2021
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8128548/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34046155 http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2021/8836625 |
Sumario: | BACKGROUND: The adoption of health information technology (HIT) is an important measure for improving healthcare quality and safety, which is affected by many hospital factors, but it has not yet been estimated in the Mongolian hospital sectors. This study examines how hospitals' organisational and geographical characteristics influence the adoption of HIT in Mongolian tertiary and secondary care hospitals. METHODS: А cross-sectional study involving the executive directors and medical equipment engineers was conducted in 39 hospitals. Data acquired from questionnaires are (1) hospitals' organisational and geographical characteristics, including bed-size capacity, ownership type, status, and location of the hospitals, and (2) the adoption rate of HIT, and its categories are based on the Health Information and Management Systems Society's classification (2002). The dependent variable was measured as numbers and the rate of HIT programs adopted clinical, administrative, and strategic information technologies (IT). A regression analysis was used to estimate the factors of impact on the adoption of clinical, administrative, and strategic IT. RESULTS: We found a concerning relationship between the characteristics and adoption of HITs. On average, the number of HIT programs adopted was 18, covering nine clinical IT programs, six administrative IT programs, and three strategic IT programs. The adoption rate of overall HIT was 33.29% in the hospitals. In regression analysis, the organisational and geographical characteristics' impact and HIT adoption of hospitals was positively associated with large bed-size (clinical IT: β = 0.256, P < 0.001; administrative IT: β = 0.3654, P < 0.001; strategic IT: β = 0.0006, P < 0.001), for-profit (strategic IT: β = 0.1995, P < 0.01), teaching (clinical IT: β = 0.2560, P < 0.05; administrative IT: β = 0.1985, P < 0.05; strategic IT: β = 0.2236, P < 0.01), and urban location (clinical IT: β = 0.2840, P < 0.001, administrative IT: β = 0.2256, P < 0.01; strategic IT: β = 0.2256, P < 0.001). CONCLUSION: Our study found that the HIT adoption rate in Mongolia is poor, and its adoption is mainly positively associated with bed-size capacity, status, and location of the hospitals. Also, we found that the ownership type is partially affected HIT adoption. |
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