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[5] P.E. Plsek and T. Greenhalgh, Complexity science: The challenge of complexity in health care, BMJ 323(7313) (2001), 625-8. [6] A. Shiell, P. Hawe, and L. Gold, Complex interventions or complex systems? Implications for health economic evaluation, BMJ: British Medical Journal 336(7656) (2008), 1281. [7] P. Hawe, A. Shiell, and T. Riley, Theorising interventions as events in systems, American Journal of Community Psychology 43(3-4) (2009), 267-276. [8] T. Greenhalgh and J. Russell, Why do evaluations of eHealth programs fail? An alternative set of guiding principles, PLoS Medicine 7(11) (2010), e1000360. [9] J.M. Corbin and A. Strauss, Unending work and care: Managing chronic illness at home, Jossey-Bass, New York, 1988. [10] T. Greenhalgh, R. Procter, J. Wherton, et al., What is quality in assisted living technology? The ARCHIE framework for effective telehealth and telecare services, BMC Medicine 13 (2015), 91. [11] J.T. Hart, The inverse care law, The Lancet 297(7696) (1971), 405-412. [12] A.K. Schaink, K. Kuluski, R.F. Lyons, et al., A scoping review and thematic classification of patient complexity: offering a unifying framework, Journal of Comorbidity 2(1) (2012), 1-9. [13] J. Pols, Care at a distance: On the closeness of technology, Amsterdam University Press, Amsterdam, 2012. [14] R.H. Coase, The nature of the firm, Economica 4(16) (1937), 386-405. [15] R.H. Coase, The problem of social cost, The Journal of Law and Economics 56(4) (2013), 837-877. [16] B.R. Theodore, J. Whittington, C. Towle, et al., Transaction cost analysis of in-clinic versus telehealth consultations for chronic pain: Preliminary evidence for rapid and affordable access to interdisciplinary collaborative consultation, Pain Medicine 16(6) (2015), 1045-1056. [17] S. Abimbola, K.N. Ukwaja, C.C. Onyedum, et al., Transaction costs of access to health care: Implications of the care-seeking pathways of tuberculosis patients for health system governance in Nigeria, Global Public Health 10(9) (2015), 1060-1077. [18] J.J. Wallis and D. North, Measuring the transaction sector in the American economy, 1870-1970, in Long- term factors in American economic growth. University of Chicago Press, Chicago (1986), 95-162. [19] M.C. Munger, Tomorrow 3.0: Transaction Costs and the Sharing Economy, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, (2018). [20] P. Lehoux, F.A. Miller, G. Daudelin, and J.-L. Denis, Providing value to new health technology: The early contribution of entrepreneurs, investors, and regulatory agencies, International Journal of Health Policy and Management 6(x) (2017), 1-10. [21] M. van Limburg, J.E. van Gemert-Pijnen, N. Nijland, et al., Why business modeling is crucial in the development of eHealth technologies, Journal of Medical Internet Research 13(4) (2011), e124. [22] A. Bandura, Social learning theory, Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs, 1976. [23] T. Greenhalgh, R. Stones, and D. Swinglehurst, Choose and Book: a sociological analysis of ‘resistance’ to an expert system, Social Science and Medicine 104 (2014), 210-219. [24] C.R. May, D.T. Eton, K. Boehmer, et al., Rethinking the patient: using Burden of Treatment Theory to understand the changing dynamics of illness, BMC Health Services Research 14(1) (2014), 1. [25] T. Greenhalgh, G. Robert, F. Macfarlane, et al., Diffusion of innovations in service organizations: systematic review and recommendations, Milbank Q 82(4) (2004), 581-629. [26] L. Fitzgerald and A. McDermott, Challenging Perspectives on Organizational Change in Health Care, Routledge, London, 2016. [27] C. May and T. Finch, Implementing, embedding, and integrating practices: an outline of normalization process theory, Sociology 43(3) (2009), 535-554. [28] E.M. Rogers, Diffusion of innovations, Simon and Schuster, New York, 2010. [29] E. Hollnagel, J. Braithwaite, and R.L. Wears, Resilient Health Care. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd, 2013. [30] C. Nemeth, R. Wears, D. Woods, et al., Minding the gaps: creating resilience in health care, in Advances in Patient Safety: New Directions and Alternative Approaches (Vol. 3: Performance and Tools), K. Henriksen, J.B. Battles, and M.A. Keyes, Editors, Agency for Healthcare Quality (US): Rockville, Maryland, 2008. [31] T. Greenhalgh, S. Shaw, J. Wherton, et al., Video outpatient consultations: A case study of real-world implementation at macro, meso, and micro level, Journal of Medical Internet Research (2018). [32] A. Triantafyllidis, C. Velardo, T. Chantler, et al., A personalised mobile-based home monitoring system for heart failure: The SUPPORT-HF Study, International Journal of Medical Informatics 84(10) (2015), 743-53. [33] T. Greenhalgh and S. Shaw, Understanding heart failure; explaining telehealth–a hermeneutic systematic review, BMC Cardiovascular Disorders 17(1) (2017), 156. T.GreenhalghandS.Abimbola /TheNASSSFramework–ASynthesisofMultipleTheories204
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Applied Interdisciplinary Theory in Health Informatics Knowledge Base for Practitioners
Titel
Applied Interdisciplinary Theory in Health Informatics
Untertitel
Knowledge Base for Practitioners
Autoren
Philip Scott
Nicolette de Keizer
Andrew Georgiou
Verlag
IOS Press BV
Ort
Amsterdam
Datum
2019
Sprache
englisch
Lizenz
CC BY-NC 4.0
ISBN
978-1-61499-991-1
Abmessungen
16.0 x 24.0 cm
Seiten
242
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Applied Interdisciplinary Theory in Health Informatics