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Published in: BMC Health Services Research 1/2020

Open Access 01-12-2020 | Research article

Antecedents of use of e-health services in Central Eastern Europe: a qualitative comparative analysis

Authors: Marek Ćwiklicki, Francesco Schiavone, Jacek Klich, Kamila Pilch

Published in: BMC Health Services Research | Issue 1/2020

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Abstract

Background

The objective of this paper is to identify the key conditions that positively affect the use of e-health services in Central Eastern Europe (CEE) countries. CEE countries after the political and economic transformation in 1989/90 implemented slightly different national health care models. The research question of the study is: how do the various institutional conditions at the national level affect the use of e-health services in CEE countries?

Methods

The e-health description was derived from papers indexed in Web of Science and Scopus. The data for computation were collected from the 2015 global survey by the WHO Global Observatory for eHealth. We used a narrative literature review in order to identify key terms associated to e-health and conditions for the implementation of e-health services. The search terms were “e-health” and “*” where * was particular thematic section of e-health according to WHO GOeH. The inclusion criterion was relevance of the paper to e-health and searched phase. Eligibility criteria for countries for being described as CEE countries: Estonia, Lithuania, Latvia, Poland, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Slovenia, and Croatia (we omitted Slovakia from the analysis because this country was not covered by the WHO Survey). We applied qualitative comparative analysis (QCA) to analyse the necessary order of conditions. The dependent variable of the study is the national rate of use of e-health services.

Results

QCA shows that legal medical jurisdiction, teleprogramme and electronic health records supplemented by adequate training constitute critical conditions to achieve success in e-health implementation.

Conclusions

We conclude that the more formalised a framework for e-health service delivery is, the more likely it will be used. Therefore formalisation fosters the diffusion, dissemination and implementation of e-health solutions in this area. Formalisation must be accompanied by tailored training for health care professionals and patients. Our analyses are related only to the paths of e-health implementation in CEE countries thus consequently the findings and conclusions cannot be directly applied to other countries. The limitations of this study are related the absence of a broader context of e-health development, including the development of ICT infrastructure and ICT literacy.
Footnotes
1
For example, the source for the Hungarian Information Society Strategy, Health and Social Services was removed (http://​www.​eski.​hu/​eprogram/​english/​Mitsesz.​pdf). The Lithuanian eHealth strategy is available only as Dėl Lietuvos E. Sveikatos 2007–2015 Metų Plėtros Strategijos Patvirtinimo (http://​www3.​lrs.​lt/​pls/​inter3/​oldsearch.​getfmt?​C1=​e&​C2=​306637), and the Romanian strategy is available as Romania Strategia de e-Sănătate a Ministerului Sănătăţii (http://​www.​ms.​gov.​ro/​documente/​256_​588_​Anexa%20​strategie%20​e-sanatate.​doc).
 
2
Since there were national governments and/or ministries of health responsible for the preparation of such strategies, it is not surprising that they were presented in a positive and optimistic way.
 
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Metadata
Title
Antecedents of use of e-health services in Central Eastern Europe: a qualitative comparative analysis
Authors
Marek Ćwiklicki
Francesco Schiavone
Jacek Klich
Kamila Pilch
Publication date
01-12-2020
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
BMC Health Services Research / Issue 1/2020
Electronic ISSN: 1472-6963
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-020-5034-9

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