Computer-supported patient involvement in heart rehabilitation
Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Article in proceedings › Research › peer-review
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Computer-supported patient involvement in heart rehabilitation. / Kensing, Finn.
Proceedings of 15th European Conference on Computer-Supported Cooperative Work: Exploratory Papers. European Society for Socially Embedded Technologies, 2017. p. 177-186 (Reports of the European Society for Socially Embedded Technologies; No. 2, Vol. 1).Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Article in proceedings › Research › peer-review
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TY - GEN
T1 - Computer-supported patient involvement in heart rehabilitation
AU - Kensing, Finn
N1 - Conference code: 15
PY - 2017
Y1 - 2017
N2 - Two of the five Danish regions, covering close to half of the population, arein the process of implementing a new EHR system. One of its sub-systems is a patientportal. The work-in-progress reported here is an exploratory study and a first level ofanalysis concerned with why, how and with which effects patients start to orientthemselves towards this subsystem, and the degree to which this has an effect on theclinicians’ work. The overall approach is a multi-site ethnographic study involving 5patients and 3 nurses responsible for a rehabilitation program for ischemic heart patients.Data are being collected through artifact and document analysis, and by interviews andobservations in patients’ homes and in nurses’ offices over so far 6 months. The analysisis informed by medical phenomenology and by conceptual frameworks developed inearlier projects conducted by the author’s research group. The preliminary findingsinclude that patients and clinicians do see the potentials of the portal, but in order toharvest these potentials we recommend rethinking the functionality and theimplementation strategy, including training of patients and clinical staff.Introduction
AB - Two of the five Danish regions, covering close to half of the population, arein the process of implementing a new EHR system. One of its sub-systems is a patientportal. The work-in-progress reported here is an exploratory study and a first level ofanalysis concerned with why, how and with which effects patients start to orientthemselves towards this subsystem, and the degree to which this has an effect on theclinicians’ work. The overall approach is a multi-site ethnographic study involving 5patients and 3 nurses responsible for a rehabilitation program for ischemic heart patients.Data are being collected through artifact and document analysis, and by interviews andobservations in patients’ homes and in nurses’ offices over so far 6 months. The analysisis informed by medical phenomenology and by conceptual frameworks developed inearlier projects conducted by the author’s research group. The preliminary findingsinclude that patients and clinicians do see the potentials of the portal, but in order toharvest these potentials we recommend rethinking the functionality and theimplementation strategy, including training of patients and clinical staff.Introduction
U2 - 10.18420/ecscw2017-22
DO - 10.18420/ecscw2017-22
M3 - Article in proceedings
T3 - Reports of the European Society for Socially Embedded Technologies
SP - 177
EP - 186
BT - Proceedings of 15th European Conference on Computer-Supported Cooperative Work
PB - European Society for Socially Embedded Technologies
T2 - 15th European Conference on Computer-Supported Cooperative Work
Y2 - 28 August 2017 through 1 September 2017
ER -
ID: 194911897