Methods Inf Med 1992; 31(03): 204-209
DOI: 10.1055/s-0038-1634874
Original Article
Schattauer GmbH

Dilemmas at a Primary Health Care Center: a baseline study for Computer-Supported Cooperative Health Care Work

T. Timpka
1   Department of Community Medicine and Department of Computer and Information Science, Linkoping University, Sweden
,
J. M. Nyce
1   Department of Community Medicine and Department of Computer and Information Science, Linkoping University, Sweden
› Author Affiliations

This work was part of the Swedish MDA program, and AIM project A2005 “Dilemma”.
Further Information

Publication History

Publication Date:
08 February 2018 (online)

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Abstract:

For the development of computer-supported cooperative health care work this study investigated, based upon activity theory, daily dilemmas encountered by the members of interprofessional primary health care work groups. The entire staff at four Swedish primary health care centers were surveyed, 199 personal interviews being conducted by the Critical Incident Technique. Medical dilemmas were mainly reported by general practitioners and nurses, organizational dilemmas by laboratory staff, nurses’ aides, and secretaries, and dilemmas in the patient-provider relation by nurses, nurses’ aides, and secretaries. Organizational and communication dilemmas reported by nurses, nurses’ aides, and secretaries often had their cause outside the control of the individual professional. These dilemmas were often “caused” by other group members (general practitioners or nurses), e.g., by not keeping appointment times or by not sharing information with patients. The implication for computer-supported cooperative health care work is that computer support should be planned on two levels. Collective work activity as a whole should benefit from individual clinical decision support for general practitioners and nurses. However, since most patient communication and organizational problems occurred at group level, group process support is required in these areas.