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Journal of e-Health Management
Managing Wireless Networks in the Healthcare Sector:
Emerging Experiences of Cultural Impacts
Wenshin
Chen and David Bennett
Volume
2010 (2010), Article ID 500498,
Journal of e-Health Management, 9 pages
Abstract
The
existing body of knowledge has generally supported that organizational
culture plays a significant role in shaping group identity, work
pattern, communication schemes, and interpersonal relations; all of
these cultural elements are important organizational factors that shape
workplaces and operational routines. In the context of emerging
information technology, it has also been suggested that organizational
culture could affect IT implementation and management. However, little
is known about how emerging information technology shapes
organizational culture, which in turn helps reshape the organization as
a whole. The purpose of this paper is thus to build empirical
understanding of how IT in general and emerging wireless networks in
particular reshapes organizational culture. Case studies conducted in
two hospitals situated in southwest U.S.A. illustrated that the
implementation of wireless networks indeed helped shape and/or reshape
organizational culture in the healthcare sector and in turn enhance
healthcare organizations’ competitiveness in the marketplace. For IT
managers and practitioners in healthcare institutions, effective
strategy to plan and manage emerging ITs such as wireless networks will
thus have long-term implications on cultivating organizational culture
that could eventually reshape workplace and competitiveness.
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