Options
Peter Rohner
Title
Prof. Dr.
Last Name
Rohner
First name
Peter
Email
peter.rohner@unisg.ch
Phone
+41 71 224 3860
Now showing
1 - 10 of 22
-
PublicationNetzwerkfähigkeit im Gesundheitswesen(Schweizerische Akademie der Technischen Wissenschaften, )Type: conference paper
-
PublicationType: conference paper
-
PublicationType: conference paperJournal: Proceedings of the 52th Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences
-
PublicationBenefits of Professional Social Networks: Expectations and Design Implications for the Healthcare Domain(York St. John University & University of Sheffield, 2015-06-25)
;Bath, Peter ;Spring, HannahSen, BarbaraSocial technologies are increasingly adopted across industries as they incorporate potential business value. Also the healthcare industry could profit from social technologies as the members of healthcare institutions have to be connected and collaborate with each other in order to reach their ambitious efficiency targets. Existing social networking sites like Facebook address the need of communication and information exchange but at the same time they are posing a challenge with regard to medical confidentiality and other privacy concerns. Taking a design science research perspective we identify current challenges of social networks for health professionals by analyzing existing social networking sites. These challenges are discussion points for qualitative in-depth interviews that focus on benefit expectations regarding professional social networks. At the end, seven design propositions for the design of social networks for health professionals are derived.Type: conference paper -
PublicationTowards a Hospital Cooperation Maturity Model - Construction and Evaluation of a Maturity Model and a corresponding Tool for the Identification of Challenges and Success Factors for Cooperation in the Hospital Sector(University of Zurich, 2011-09-08)
;Bath, Peter A. ;Raptis, Dimitri A.Sen, Barbara A.Type: conference paper -
PublicationA taxonomy for multi-perspective ex ante evaluation of the value of complementary health information systems - applying the unified theory of acceptance and use of technology(IEEE Computer Society, 2010-01-05)
;Fitterer, RenéSprague, Ralph H. Jr.Type: conference paperScopus© Citations 10 -
PublicationComponent-based process modelling in health care(Università di Verona, Facoltà di Economia, Departimento de Economia Aziendale, 2009-06-08)
;Baacke, Lars ;Newell, Susan ;Whitley, Edgar ;Pouloudi, Nancy ;Wareham, JonathanMathiassen, LarsStructural changes and increasing market dynamics in the health care sector intensify the hospitals' need for cost-savings and process optimization. A first step is the documentation of processes in order to clarify the actual needs. As in health care processes are rather complex and often different players with divergent demands are involved, a disciplined approach to effectively and efficiently model processes is required. For this purpose, in this contribution a component-based modelling approach is presented and applied.Type: conference paper -
PublicationComponent-Based Distributed Modeling of Collaborative Service Processes - A Methodology for the Identification of Reference Process Building Blocks(IEEE Computer Society, 2009-01-05)
;Baacke, Lars ;Fitterer, RenéSprague, Ralph H.Documenting complex and collaborative business processes is time-consuming and cost-intensive. Reference modeling offers compositional mechanisms which provide the ability to overcome such challenges by supporting component-oriented procedural structures. This paper describes a methodology for the domain-independent development of components, in the following called reference process building blocks (RPBBs), which can be used for distributed, i.e. asynchronous collaborative, modeling of complex and cross-departmental process structures. Initially, fundamental requirements and the structuring of RPBBs into activities and information objects are discussed. The RPBB generation procedure consisting of identification, evaluation and revision is then applied using the public sector as an example and the resulting RPBB catalogue is presented. Finally, formal and contentual evaluations are described which both confirm the applicability of the identified RPBBs for distributed modeling of complex, collaborative processes as well as the usability of the designed methodology.Type: conference paper -
PublicationPerformance Management in Health Care: The Past, the Present, and the Future(Österreichische Computer Gesellschaft, 2009-02-25)
;Hansen, Hans Robert ;Karagiannis, DimitrisFill, Hans-GeorgIn today’s fast changing health care sector, decision makers are facing a growing demand for both clinical and administrative information in order to comply with legal and customer-specific requirements. Performance Management (PM) is thus becoming increasingly important to catch up with the rising informational demands. However, little is known about the PM usage in health care since the constituent research about PM is primarily focussed on the industrial sector. For this purpose, an exploratory survey for the health care sector is presented.Type: conference paperVolume: 2 -
PublicationSituational Maturity Models as Instrumental Artifacts for Organizational Design(Association for Computing Machinery, 2009-05-07)Vaishanvi, VijayIn order to identify and explore the strength and weaknesses of particular organizational designs, a wide range of maturity models have been developed by both, practitioners and academics over the past years. However, a systematization and generalization of the procedure on how to design maturity models as well as a synthesis of design science research with the rather behavioural field of organization theory is still lacking. Trying to combine the best of both fields, a first design proposition of a situational maturity model is presented in this paper. The proposed maturity model design is illustrated with the help of an instantiation for the healthcare domain.Type: conference paper
- «
- 1 (current)
- 2
- 3
- »