Full Text Available

Note: Clicking the button above will open the full text document at the original institutional repository in a new window.

Situating mHealth in the workplace: a coordination studies perspective

A central assumption of extant mHealth literature is that the technology empowers health care staff and leads to increased efficiency in service delivery. This assumption foregrounds the transformative potential of mHealth and the active appropriation of the technology, but obscures how it integrate...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Wolff-Piggott, Brendon
Other Authors: Rivett, Ulrike
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Information Systems 2021
Subjects:
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1867614422304817152
access_status_str Open Access
author Wolff-Piggott, Brendon
author2 Rivett, Ulrike
author_browse Rivett, Ulrike
Wolff-Piggott, Brendon
author_facet Rivett, Ulrike
Wolff-Piggott, Brendon
author_sort Wolff-Piggott, Brendon
collection Thesis
description A central assumption of extant mHealth literature is that the technology empowers health care staff and leads to increased efficiency in service delivery. This assumption foregrounds the transformative potential of mHealth and the active appropriation of the technology, but obscures how it integrates with existing workplace arrangements. To interrogate the limitations of this dominant assumption, this research examines how mHealth is coordinated in the workplace in practice, and the perceptions and experiences of health care staff of the place mHealth takes in their daily concerns. In this way the research reveals how existing workplace arrangements influence the way that mHealth operates in practice, and builds on extant research to clarify how this can shift responsibility for the success of the implementation onto those staff with the least recognition and security. An interpretive case study explores the coordination of mHealth in the workplace, and analyses unexpected outcomes to identify their implications for theory and practice. In order to highlight this phenomenon the research focussed on the experiences of the clinic staff who were responsible for mHealth implementation, but were not the end users and who did not receive direct benefits themselves. The analysis drew on coordination studies to identify social and artefact-based coordination mechanisms, as well as the significance of relationships in mHealth in the workplace, yielding robust evidence that social coordination mechanisms rather than the fitness for purpose of the specific technology shaped the coordination process. Issues arising from the specific setting also influenced coordination in important ways that were not predicted in the official training material. The research makes three theoretical contributions that advance understanding of mHealth in the workplace through abduction. First, it identifies two novel coordination mechanisms: role flexibility and covert routines. Second, through the novel concept of multiple accountability, it challenges one of the key integrative principles proposed in the coordination studies perspective, problematising it and proposing that relationships between health intermediaries and local communities are far more influential for the coordination of mHealth than extant theory has so far proposed. Third, it carries important implications for future mHealth (and, more broadly, technology coordination) scholarship, providing evidence that existing coordination mechanisms and relationships may be as influential as the transformative potential of the technology itself. The research also contributes to practice by enhancing understanding of how health intermediaries may be empowered to effectively employ mHealth in the workplace. In a context of policy and funding uncertainty, this research contributes to an emerging literature identifying the practical mHealth issues primary health care staff face in a resource-poor environment, interrogating approaches that fail to recognise these realities.
format Thesis
id oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/33069
institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:51:47.502Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2021
publishDateRange 2021
publishDateSort 2021
publisher Department of Information Systems
publisherStr Department of Information Systems
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/33069 Situating mHealth in the workplace: a coordination studies perspective Wolff-Piggott, Brendon Rivett, Ulrike mHealth coordination coordination mechanisms integrative perspective health intermediaries A central assumption of extant mHealth literature is that the technology empowers health care staff and leads to increased efficiency in service delivery. This assumption foregrounds the transformative potential of mHealth and the active appropriation of the technology, but obscures how it integrates with existing workplace arrangements. To interrogate the limitations of this dominant assumption, this research examines how mHealth is coordinated in the workplace in practice, and the perceptions and experiences of health care staff of the place mHealth takes in their daily concerns. In this way the research reveals how existing workplace arrangements influence the way that mHealth operates in practice, and builds on extant research to clarify how this can shift responsibility for the success of the implementation onto those staff with the least recognition and security. An interpretive case study explores the coordination of mHealth in the workplace, and analyses unexpected outcomes to identify their implications for theory and practice. In order to highlight this phenomenon the research focussed on the experiences of the clinic staff who were responsible for mHealth implementation, but were not the end users and who did not receive direct benefits themselves. The analysis drew on coordination studies to identify social and artefact-based coordination mechanisms, as well as the significance of relationships in mHealth in the workplace, yielding robust evidence that social coordination mechanisms rather than the fitness for purpose of the specific technology shaped the coordination process. Issues arising from the specific setting also influenced coordination in important ways that were not predicted in the official training material. The research makes three theoretical contributions that advance understanding of mHealth in the workplace through abduction. First, it identifies two novel coordination mechanisms: role flexibility and covert routines. Second, through the novel concept of multiple accountability, it challenges one of the key integrative principles proposed in the coordination studies perspective, problematising it and proposing that relationships between health intermediaries and local communities are far more influential for the coordination of mHealth than extant theory has so far proposed. Third, it carries important implications for future mHealth (and, more broadly, technology coordination) scholarship, providing evidence that existing coordination mechanisms and relationships may be as influential as the transformative potential of the technology itself. The research also contributes to practice by enhancing understanding of how health intermediaries may be empowered to effectively employ mHealth in the workplace. In a context of policy and funding uncertainty, this research contributes to an emerging literature identifying the practical mHealth issues primary health care staff face in a resource-poor environment, interrogating approaches that fail to recognise these realities. 2021-03-02T21:21:43Z 2021-03-02T21:21:43Z 2020 2021-03-02T21:17:21Z Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/33069 eng application/pdf Department of Information Systems Faculty of Commerce
spellingShingle mHealth
coordination
coordination mechanisms
integrative perspective
health intermediaries
Wolff-Piggott, Brendon
Situating mHealth in the workplace: a coordination studies perspective
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title Situating mHealth in the workplace: a coordination studies perspective
title_full Situating mHealth in the workplace: a coordination studies perspective
title_fullStr Situating mHealth in the workplace: a coordination studies perspective
title_full_unstemmed Situating mHealth in the workplace: a coordination studies perspective
title_short Situating mHealth in the workplace: a coordination studies perspective
title_sort situating mhealth in the workplace a coordination studies perspective
topic mHealth
coordination
coordination mechanisms
integrative perspective
health intermediaries
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/33069
work_keys_str_mv AT wolffpiggottbrendon situatingmhealthintheworkplaceacoordinationstudiesperspective