FACTORS RELATED WITH HOSPITAL INFORMATION SYSTEM (HIMS) POOR PERFORMANCE FROM USER'S EVALUATIONS THOROUGH MALCOLM BALDRIGE CONCEPT IN KERTHA USADA HOSPITAL SINGARAJA-BALI
Keywords:
Hospital Management Information System (HMIS), Malcolm Baldrige, hospital good governance, Kertha Usada Hospital Singaraja-Bali.Abstract
Background: Hospital is developing not only as social entity also for business. As business entity the hospital must gain the profit. To have profit the hospital must increase the productivity and keep the level of patients visit. The hospital should keep the patients and employees satisfaction, with the efficiency within. Use hospital information management system (HIMS) will be helping. HIMS must have good performance to make satisfy the users, either internal or external. Factors related are: strategic planning which is involve all of the stakeholders, practice and accompaniment while implementation, benefit for business process (quality control, integration, monitoring & evaluation, with full support from the hospital management. This study wants to see the entire factor by qualitative study associated with Malcom Baldrige Concept.
Aims: This study is aimed to find out factors related with HIMS poor performance from Malcom Baldrige concept including leadership, strategic planning, focuses on patients-customer and markets, measurement-analyze and knowledge management, work-force focus, process management, and result.
Methods: This study was done by a qualitative study to find out entire factors related with Kertha Usada HIMS poor performance thorough Malcom Baldrige Concept.
Results: The key informant reveals the factors related with Kertha Usada HIMS poor performance are: difficult to operate, inadequate training and accompaniment, couldn't integrated, didn't gave benefit on works, no incentive, and less support from the management.
Conclusion: The hospital should have good hospital governance in the used of Hospital Information Management System.
Downloads
References
American Hospital Association (AHA). Continued Progress: Hospital Use of Information Technology. 2007 (cited 2016 Des 14). Available from: http:www.aha.org/aha/content/2007/pdf/070227- continuedprogress.pdf.
Ammenwerth, E., Graber, S., Herrmann, G., Burkle, T., Konig, J. Evaluation of health information systems – problems and challenges. International Journal of Medical Informatics. 2003; 71 Nos 2/3: 125-35.
Davis, F. Perceived usefulness, perceived ease of use, and user acceptance of information technology. MIS Quarterly. 1989; 13(3):319- 40.
Degoulet, P., Fieschi, M. Introduction to Clinical Informatics. New York: Springer Verlag; 1997.
DeLone, W, McLean, E. The DeLone, McLean. Model of information systems success: a ten-year update. Journal of Management
Information Systems. 2003; 19 (4): 9-30.
Drummond, M.F., O'Brien, B.J., Stoddart, G.L., Torrance, G.W. Methods for the Economic Evaluation of Health Care Programmes,
nd ed. New York: Oxford Univ Pr; 1997.
Encinosa, William E. BaeJaeyong. 2011. Health Information and Its effects on Hospital Costs, Outcomes, and Patient Safety. Inquiry.
; 48(4):288-303
Gold, M.R., Siegel, J.E., Russell, L.B., Weinstein, M.C. Cost-Effectiveness in Health and Medicine. New York: Oxford Univ Pr; 1996.
Grant, A., Plante, I., Leblanc, F. The TEAM methodology for the evaluation of information systems in biomedicine, Computers in
Biology and Medicine. 2003; 32(3):195-207.
Grazier, Kyle, L. A timely and practical guideline that explains how to make full use of existing health care resources by applying
existing measures of performance. 2001; 46:1: 3-7
Grover, V., Jeong, S.R., Segars, A.H. Information systems effectiveness: the construct space and patterns of application, Information
& Management. 1996; 4(1):117-91.
NIST. Baldrige performance excellence: how baldrige works. 2016. (cited 2016 December 14) available from
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2022 Each author(s) agree to transfer all copyrights and assign YAYASAN ALIANSI CENDEKIAWAN INDONESIA THAILAND, the Publisher of Proceedings of the International Conference on Applied Science and Health, for the full term of exclusive copyright and any extensions or renewals of that terms thereof throughout the world, including but not limited to publish, disseminate, transmit, store, translate, distribute, sell, republish and use the Contribution and material contained therein in print and electronic form of the journal and in other derivative works, in all languages and any form of media of expression available now or in the future and to license or permit others to do so.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
Proceedings of the International Conference on Applied Science and Health is an open access following Creative Commons License Deed – Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0). Users are allowed to copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format as well as remix, transform, and build upon the material with one condition--appropriate credit is given to the journal.