Professionalism of Information Management in Health Care: Development and Validation of the Construct and Its Measurement

Abstract:

BACKGROUND Against the background of a steadily increasing degree of digitalization in health care, a professional information management (IM) is required to successfully plan, implement, and evaluate information technology (IT). At its core, IM has to ensure a high quality of health data and health information systems to support patient care. OBJECTIVES The goal of the present study was to define what constitutes professional IM as a construct as well as to propose a reliable and valid measurement instrument. METHODS To develop and validate the construct of professionalism of information management (PIM) and its measurement, a stepwise approach followed an established procedure from information systems and behavioral research. The procedure included an analysis of the pertaining literature and expert rounds on the construct and the instrument, two consecutive and comprehensive surveys at the national and international level, exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses as well as reliability and validity testing. RESULTS Professionalism of information management was developed as a construct consisting of the three dimensions of strategic, tactical, and operational IM as well as of the regularity and cyclical phases of IM procedures as the two elements of professionalism. The PIM instrument operationalized the construct providing items that incorporated IM procedures along the three dimensions and cyclical phases. These procedures had to be evaluated against their degree of regularity in the instrument. The instrument proved to be reliable and valid in two consecutive measurement phases and across three countries. CONCLUSION It can be concluded that professionalism of information management is a meaningful construct that can be operationalized in a scientifically rigorous manner. Both science and practice can benefit from these developments in terms of improved self-assessment, benchmarking capabilities, and eventually, obtaining a better understanding of health IT maturity.

DOI: 10.1055/s-0040-1712465.

Projects: Management of health information systems

Publication type: Journal article

Journal: Methods of Information in Medicine

Human Diseases: No Human Disease specified

Citation: Methods of Information in Medicine 59(S 01):e1-e12

Date Published: 2020

Registered Mode: imported from a bibtex file

Authors: Johannes Thye, Moritz Esdar, Jan-David Liebe, Franziska Jahn, Alfred Winter, Ursula Hübner

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Created: 10th Nov 2020 at 14:49

Last updated: 7th Dec 2021 at 17:58

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