Volume 24, Issue 6 pp. 789-797
Original Article

The influence of social challenges when implementing information systems in a Swedish health-care organisation

Lina Nilsson PhD

Corresponding Author

Lina Nilsson PhD

Project Coordinator

Department of Health, Faculty of Health Sciences, Blekinge Institute of Technology, Karlskrona, Sweden

Correspondence

Lina Nilsson

Faculty of Health Sciences

Department of Health

Blekinge Institute of Technology

S–371 79 Karlskrona

Sweden

E-mail: [email protected]

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Sara Eriksén PhD

Sara Eriksén PhD

Professor

Department of Creative Technologies, Faculty of Computing, Blekinge Institute of Technology, Karlskrona, Sweden

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Christel Borg RN, PhD

Christel Borg RN, PhD

Senior Lecturer

Department of Health and Care Sciences, Faculty of Health and Life Sciences, Linneaus University, Kalmar, Sweden

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First published: 28 April 2016
Citations: 11

Abstract

Aim

To describe and obtain a deeper understanding of social challenges and their influence on the implementation process when implementing Information systems in a Swedish health-care organisation.

Background

Despite positive effects when implementing Information systems in health-care organisations, there are difficulties in the implementation process. Nurses' experiences of being neglected have been dismissed as reasons for setbacks in implementation.

Methods

An Institutional Ethnography design was used. A deductive content analysis was made influenced by empirically identified social challenges of power, professional identity and encounters. An abstraction was made of the analysis.

Results

Nineteen nurses at macro, meso and micro levels were interviewed in focus groups. Organisational levels are lost in different ways in how to control the reformation, how to introduce Information systems as reformation strategies and in how to translate new tools and assumptions that do not fit traditional ways of working in shaping professional identities.

Conclusion and implication for nurse management

Different focus may affect the reformation of health-care organisations and implementation and knowledge processes. An implementation climate is needed where the system standards fit the values of the users. Nursing management needs to be visionary, engaged and work with risk factors in order to reform the hierarchical health-care organisation.

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