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Showing papers by "Paul Jen-Hwa Hu published in 1998"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Telemedicine technology has the potential to support physicians' patient care and improve health care organizations' competitiveness.
Abstract: Rapidly changing dynamics and turbulence in the business environment have made technology management increasingly critical to the bottom-line survival and competitiveness of many organizations. Adoption and diffusion are 2 challenging technology management issues facing health care organizations. As health care is becoming an increasingly important sector of the national and the global economy, contemporary problems in access, equality, and costs have demanded innovativeness from health care organizations that, in response need to adopt and institutionalize appropriate technological innovations for service improvement and expansion. A case in point is telemedicine technology that has the potential to support physicians' patient care and improve health care organizations' competitiveness.

43 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The preliminary findings suggested that use of telemedicine among clinicians in Hong Kong was moderate, and the intensity of their technology usage was low.
Abstract: Physicians' acceptance of telemedicine is an important managerial issue facing health-care organizations that have adopted, or are about to adopt, telemedicine. Most previous investigations of the acceptance of telemedicine have lacked theoretical foundation and been of limited scope. We examined technology acceptance and usage among physicians and specialists from 49 clinical departments at eight public tertiary hospitals in Hong Kong. Out of the 1021 questionnaires distributed, 310 were completed and returned, a 30% response rate. The preliminary findings suggested that use of telemedicine among clinicians in Hong Kong was moderate. While 18% of the respondents were using some form of telemedicine for patient care and management, it accounted for only 6.3% of the services provided. The intensity of their technology usage was also low, accounting for only 6.8% of a typical telemedicine-assisted service. These preliminary findings have managerial implications.

17 citations