An Empirical Investigation of Health Practitioners Technology Adoption: The Mediating Role of Electronic Health
Loading...
Date
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
International Journal of Public Administration
Abstract
Health technology innovation integration is rapidly growing in global health-care settings.
However, research on factors driving technology adoption intention is limited. On this note, it
has become important to investigate and understand the complex factors underpinning practitioners’
technology adoption intentions. Drawing on the Technology Acceptance Model and The
Institutional Theory, we propose a model to empirically investigate technology adoption and its
potency in driving universal health coverage, mediated by electronic health technology. We used
data collected from 416 health sector practitioners to empirically test the model. Using the
Structural Equation Modeling technique, the study found that perceived ease of use and relevant
technology infrastructure all have significant positive relationship with universal health coverage.
However, perceived usefulness, management support and adequate practitioner training were
found to have negative relationship with universal health coverage. The results further revealed
that perceived-ease-of-use, perceived usefulness, management support, adequate practitioner
training and relevant technology infrastructure also have positive relationship with electronic
health technology. Moreover, electronic health technology as a mediator was also found to have
significant relationship with universal health coverage. The implications of the findings are
discussed and suggestions for future research are subsequently highlighted.
Description
Research Article