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Information technology impacts on fl...
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Jahn, Michelle Anne.
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Information technology impacts on flows of information and task coordination on outpatient medication delivery processes.
Record Type:
Electronic resources : Monograph/item
Title/Author:
Information technology impacts on flows of information and task coordination on outpatient medication delivery processes./
Author:
Jahn, Michelle Anne.
Description:
198 p.
Notes:
Source: Masters Abstracts International, Volume: 55-02.
Contained By:
Masters Abstracts International55-02(E).
Subject:
Industrial engineering. -
Online resource:
http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=1603060
ISBN:
9781339204635
Information technology impacts on flows of information and task coordination on outpatient medication delivery processes.
Jahn, Michelle Anne.
Information technology impacts on flows of information and task coordination on outpatient medication delivery processes.
- 198 p.
Source: Masters Abstracts International, Volume: 55-02.
Thesis (M.S.I.E.)--Purdue University, 2015.
With over 4 billion prescriptions dispensed annually in the United States and an abundance of opportunities for adverse drug events, the safety and efficiency of medication delivery processes has become a priority for many healthcare organizations. This thesis addresses challenges and opportunities for improving the safety, efficiency, and quality of care of medication delivery for both providers and patients in the understudied community pharmacy system. The goal of this research is to understand how healthcare information technology (health IT) impacts medication delivery processes in community pharmacy systems. This work uses a systems engineering framework to analyze two different examples of health IT implementation from different points in medication delivery process. Study 1 utilizes time study methods to evaluate the effectiveness of an Automated Prescription Tracker (APT) technology from the pharmacist's perspective. The results indicate that there are several unintended consequences with the physical design of the APT technology and its integration with the existing system technology. The second study used survey methods to explore patients' perceptions of features in pharmacy mobile applications. Key findings from Study 2 revealed that patients might be less interested in elaborate features and more interested in features that help them be more involved in their healthcare. While Study 1 and Study 2 used different approaches, they are related in that they are each an example of evaluating health IT in community pharmacy from two different perspectives (patient and provider) at two different points in medication delivery. The main theoretical contribution of this work is the presentation of medication delivery as a cyclical work process where there are multiple points for technology interventions. The key findings from both studies can be applied to the design and implementation of future technologies to further improve the efficiency, safety, and quality of care in community pharmacy systems with respect to medication delivery processes.
ISBN: 9781339204635Subjects--Topical Terms:
526216
Industrial engineering.
Information technology impacts on flows of information and task coordination on outpatient medication delivery processes.
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Information technology impacts on flows of information and task coordination on outpatient medication delivery processes.
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198 p.
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Source: Masters Abstracts International, Volume: 55-02.
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Adviser: Barrett S. Caldwell.
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With over 4 billion prescriptions dispensed annually in the United States and an abundance of opportunities for adverse drug events, the safety and efficiency of medication delivery processes has become a priority for many healthcare organizations. This thesis addresses challenges and opportunities for improving the safety, efficiency, and quality of care of medication delivery for both providers and patients in the understudied community pharmacy system. The goal of this research is to understand how healthcare information technology (health IT) impacts medication delivery processes in community pharmacy systems. This work uses a systems engineering framework to analyze two different examples of health IT implementation from different points in medication delivery process. Study 1 utilizes time study methods to evaluate the effectiveness of an Automated Prescription Tracker (APT) technology from the pharmacist's perspective. The results indicate that there are several unintended consequences with the physical design of the APT technology and its integration with the existing system technology. The second study used survey methods to explore patients' perceptions of features in pharmacy mobile applications. Key findings from Study 2 revealed that patients might be less interested in elaborate features and more interested in features that help them be more involved in their healthcare. While Study 1 and Study 2 used different approaches, they are related in that they are each an example of evaluating health IT in community pharmacy from two different perspectives (patient and provider) at two different points in medication delivery. The main theoretical contribution of this work is the presentation of medication delivery as a cyclical work process where there are multiple points for technology interventions. The key findings from both studies can be applied to the design and implementation of future technologies to further improve the efficiency, safety, and quality of care in community pharmacy systems with respect to medication delivery processes.
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http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=1603060
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