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Ping Yu

Researcher at Illawarra Health & Medical Research Institute

Publications -  151
Citations -  2889

Ping Yu is an academic researcher from Illawarra Health & Medical Research Institute. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health care & Information system. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 129 publications receiving 2305 citations. Previous affiliations of Ping Yu include Information Technology University & University of Wollongong.

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Health IT acceptance factors in long-term care facilities: a cross-sectional survey

TL;DR: Perceived usefulness, perceived ease of use and computer skills had significant positive impact, whereas image had significant negative impact on caregivers' intention to use health IT applications.
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Quality of nursing documentation and approaches to its evaluation: a mixed-method systematic review

TL;DR: Research should pay more attention to the accuracy of nursing documentation, factors leading to variation in practice and flaws in documentation quality and the effects of these on nursing practice and patient outcomes, and the evaluation of quality measurement.
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A Review of Data Quality Assessment Methods for Public Health Information Systems

TL;DR: It was found the dimension of data was most frequently assessed andpleteness, accuracy, and timeliness were the three most-used attributes among a total of 49 attributes of data quality.
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Using diffusion of innovation theory to understand the factors impacting patient acceptance and use of consumer e-health innovations: a case study in a primary care clinic

TL;DR: A need for health care providers to consider and address the identified factors before implementing more complicated consumer e-health innovations is pointed to.
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Patients' Acceptance of Smartphone Health Technology for Chronic Disease Management: A Theoretical Model and Empirical Test

TL;DR: Although resistance to change is a significant barrier to technology acceptance, careful management of doctor-patient relationship, and raising patients’ awareness of the negative effect of chronic disease can negate the effect of resistance and encourage acceptance and use of smartphone health technology to support chronic disease management for patients in the community.