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      Charting Complex Change: Application of the e-Health Implementation Toolkit (e-HIT) in ‘dallas’

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      , , ,
      BCS Health Informatics Scotland (HIS) (HIS)
      BCS Health Informatics Scotland (HIS)
      2 - 3 September 2014
      eHealth, Integrated Delivery of Health Care, National Health Programs, Qualitative Research
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            Abstract

            The ‘dallas’ (Delivering Assisted Living Lifestyles at Scale) programme is a UK-wide digital healthcare initiative that has been designed to support independent living, enhance preventative care, and improve lifestyles by harnessing the potential of e-health technologies and digital services. This short paper presents a brief update on one strand of the University of Glasgow evaluation of the dallas programme. We have used the e-Health Implementation Toolkit (e-HIT) to investigate processes involved in the implementation of e-health tools and digital services being developed and deployed across the dallas communities and to assess ‘distance travelled’ by communities from baseline to midpoint of a three year programme. Qualitative data analysis was guided by the Normalisation Process Theory (NPT) and Framework Analysis. The e-HIT scores indicated that the dallas communities had underestimated the amount of work involved in implementing at scale. Qualitative data analysis showed that communities have successfully navigated barriers in order to make significant progress in strategic areas, including the development of new models of partnership working resulting in brand recognition and agile service design. The dallas communities are now sharing lessons learned and generating new professional knowledge, skills and understanding across several key strategic areas required for operationalising the implementation of e-health technologies and digital services at scale. The new knowledge being generated through the dallas programme will contribute to the ongoing transformation of digitally enabled healthcare based on more personalised flexible models of provision which resonates with the current e-health policy environment.

            Content

            Author and article information

            Contributors
            Conference
            September 2014
            September 2014
            : 1-3
            Affiliations
            [0001]Institute of Health & Well-Being

            University of Glasgow
            [0002]Dept. of Computer &

            Information Science,

            University of Strathclyde
            Article
            10.14236/ewic/HIS2014.9
            aa57da0a-54ce-447a-aa75-263a885c7f57
            © Alison M. Devlin et al. Published by BCS Learning and Development Ltd. BCS Health Informatics Scotland (HIS), Glasgow, UK

            This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Unported License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

            BCS Health Informatics Scotland (HIS)
            HIS
            Glasgow, UK
            2 - 3 September 2014
            Electronic Workshops in Computing (eWiC)
            BCS Health Informatics Scotland (HIS)
            History
            Product

            1477-9358 BCS Learning & Development

            Self URI (article page): https://www.scienceopen.com/hosted-document?doi=10.14236/ewic/HIS2014.9
            Self URI (journal page): https://ewic.bcs.org/
            Categories
            Electronic Workshops in Computing

            Applied computer science,Computer science,Security & Cryptology,Graphics & Multimedia design,General computer science,Human-computer-interaction
            eHealth,Qualitative Research,National Health Programs,Integrated Delivery of Health Care

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