Background: Covid-19 is disrupting the healthcare industry. Policies and regulatory changes in general necessitate adaptation from the healthcare industry, particularly those affecting the payment system, clients, and the environment. On the other hand, as policymakers around the world look to digital transformation to make healthcare systems more resilient, affordable, and accessible, a rare and remarkable opportunity for the information systems research community to leverage its in-depth knowledge to both advance theory and influence practice and policy has emerged. Problem discussion: The changes brought by Covid necessitate resilience in the healthcare industry, which most countries are not yet prepared for, as it will necessitate a large number of workers and effective policies for the recovery process in the post of Covid 19. Crucially, many people lack the resources to scale up health interventions as well as the financial resources to implement support measures and improve resilience. This research will answer the following considerable question, how can countries now build more resilient healthcare systems capable of withstanding pandemics? What role can technology play in these efforts? Purpose: The thesis will aim to discover how the healthcare industry in developing countries will be resilient as they digitize their operations in the post of Covid disruption situations. The finding in this research will be identified by the combination of the HIT framework following four major sectors of health information technology: financial, functional, user, and environmental, and the resilience capabilities such as anticipating, monitoring, responding, and learning. The result of the finding will be involved in chapter 4. Method: In this paper, a qualitative method was used to answer the research question. Inductive and deductive techniques were used to expand the research by moving from individual data to broader generalizations and ideas. The detail of all the methodology steps will be explained in chapter 3. First, we began with specific observations and measurements by interviewing organizations and individuals related to the healthcare industry in one highlighted developing country for the primary data and used reliable websites such as Google Scholar, Microsoft Academic, Academic databases, etc for the secondary data. Due to the limitation of the interview responses, we chose Vietnam as our sample. Then we started noticing the HIT strategies, then we went a step further with interpretation to explain these preliminary discoveries that we wanted to investigate, and finally ended up developing some general digital conclusions or theories. Conclusion: Putting these innovations in place now helps the healthcare sector build a stronger resilience health ability, allowing it to be better prepared for future peaks and valleys. In conclusion, some innovative technology solutions from HIT strategies have been proposed, such as the top-down governance system which has been used to support the leaders to reach all levels of government. Aside from that, the effectiveness of the information system's preparation and the role of the surveillance system are critical in the early stages of resilience. All of the detail from the HIT recommendation strategies will be explained in chapter 5.
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:UPSALLA1/oai:DiVA.org:hj-57010 |
Date | January 2022 |
Creators | An, Nguyen, Tuong, Ho, Hien, Bui |
Publisher | Jönköping University, IHH, Företagsekonomi |
Source Sets | DiVA Archive at Upsalla University |
Language | English |
Detected Language | English |
Type | Student thesis, info:eu-repo/semantics/bachelorThesis, text |
Format | application/pdf |
Rights | info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess |
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