Care Models of eHealth Services: A Case Study on the Design of a Business Model for an Online Precare Service

BackgroundWith a growing population of health care clients in the future, the organization of high-quality and cost-effective service providing becomes an increasing challenge. New online eHealth services are proposed as innovative options for the future. Yet, a major barrier...

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Main Authors: van Meeuwen, Dorine PD, van Walt Meijer, Quirine J, Simonse, Lianne WL
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2015-03-01
Series:JMIR Research Protocols
Online Access:http://www.researchprotocols.org/2015/1/e32/
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spelling doaj-4d7e149c8aac4187a0cb3ad5502b2c512021-05-02T19:28:47ZengJMIR PublicationsJMIR Research Protocols1929-07482015-03-0141e3210.2196/resprot.3501Care Models of eHealth Services: A Case Study on the Design of a Business Model for an Online Precare Servicevan Meeuwen, Dorine PDvan Walt Meijer, Quirine JSimonse, Lianne WL BackgroundWith a growing population of health care clients in the future, the organization of high-quality and cost-effective service providing becomes an increasing challenge. New online eHealth services are proposed as innovative options for the future. Yet, a major barrier to these services appears to be the lack of new business model designs. Although design efforts generally result in visual models, no such artifacts have been found in the literature on business model design. This paper investigates business model design in eHealth service practices from a design perspective. It adopts a research by design approach and seeks to unravel what characteristics of business models determine an online service and what are important value exchanges between health professionals and clients. ObjectiveThe objective of the study was to analyze the construction of care models in-depth, framing the essential elements of a business model, and design a new care model that structures these elements for the particular context of an online pre-care service in practice. MethodsThis research employs a qualitative method of an in-depth case study in which different perspectives on constructing a care model are investigated. Data are collected by using the visual business modeling toolkit, designed to cocreate and visualize the business model. The cocreated models are transcribed and analyzed per actor perspective, transactions, and value attributes. ResultsWe revealed eight new actors in the business model for providing the service. Essential actors are: the intermediary network coordinator connecting companies, the service dedicated information technology specialists, and the service dedicated health specialist. In the transactions for every service providing we found a certain type of contract, such as a license contract and service contracts for precare services and software products. In addition to the efficiency, quality, and convenience, important value attributes appeared to be: timelines, privacy and credibility, availability, pleasantness, and social interaction. Based on the in-depth insights from the actor perspectives, the business model for online precare services is modeled with a visual design. A new care model of the online precare service is designed and compiled of building blocks for the business model. ConclusionsFor the construction of a care model, actors, transactions, and value attributes are essential elements. The design of a care model structures these elements in a visual way. Guided by the business modeling toolkit, the care model design artifact is visualized in the context of an online precare service. Important building blocks include: provision of an online flow of information with regular interactions to the client stimulates self-management of personal health and service-dedicated health expert ensure an increase of the perceived quality of the eHealth service.http://www.researchprotocols.org/2015/1/e32/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author van Meeuwen, Dorine PD
van Walt Meijer, Quirine J
Simonse, Lianne WL
spellingShingle van Meeuwen, Dorine PD
van Walt Meijer, Quirine J
Simonse, Lianne WL
Care Models of eHealth Services: A Case Study on the Design of a Business Model for an Online Precare Service
JMIR Research Protocols
author_facet van Meeuwen, Dorine PD
van Walt Meijer, Quirine J
Simonse, Lianne WL
author_sort van Meeuwen, Dorine PD
title Care Models of eHealth Services: A Case Study on the Design of a Business Model for an Online Precare Service
title_short Care Models of eHealth Services: A Case Study on the Design of a Business Model for an Online Precare Service
title_full Care Models of eHealth Services: A Case Study on the Design of a Business Model for an Online Precare Service
title_fullStr Care Models of eHealth Services: A Case Study on the Design of a Business Model for an Online Precare Service
title_full_unstemmed Care Models of eHealth Services: A Case Study on the Design of a Business Model for an Online Precare Service
title_sort care models of ehealth services: a case study on the design of a business model for an online precare service
publisher JMIR Publications
series JMIR Research Protocols
issn 1929-0748
publishDate 2015-03-01
description BackgroundWith a growing population of health care clients in the future, the organization of high-quality and cost-effective service providing becomes an increasing challenge. New online eHealth services are proposed as innovative options for the future. Yet, a major barrier to these services appears to be the lack of new business model designs. Although design efforts generally result in visual models, no such artifacts have been found in the literature on business model design. This paper investigates business model design in eHealth service practices from a design perspective. It adopts a research by design approach and seeks to unravel what characteristics of business models determine an online service and what are important value exchanges between health professionals and clients. ObjectiveThe objective of the study was to analyze the construction of care models in-depth, framing the essential elements of a business model, and design a new care model that structures these elements for the particular context of an online pre-care service in practice. MethodsThis research employs a qualitative method of an in-depth case study in which different perspectives on constructing a care model are investigated. Data are collected by using the visual business modeling toolkit, designed to cocreate and visualize the business model. The cocreated models are transcribed and analyzed per actor perspective, transactions, and value attributes. ResultsWe revealed eight new actors in the business model for providing the service. Essential actors are: the intermediary network coordinator connecting companies, the service dedicated information technology specialists, and the service dedicated health specialist. In the transactions for every service providing we found a certain type of contract, such as a license contract and service contracts for precare services and software products. In addition to the efficiency, quality, and convenience, important value attributes appeared to be: timelines, privacy and credibility, availability, pleasantness, and social interaction. Based on the in-depth insights from the actor perspectives, the business model for online precare services is modeled with a visual design. A new care model of the online precare service is designed and compiled of building blocks for the business model. ConclusionsFor the construction of a care model, actors, transactions, and value attributes are essential elements. The design of a care model structures these elements in a visual way. Guided by the business modeling toolkit, the care model design artifact is visualized in the context of an online precare service. Important building blocks include: provision of an online flow of information with regular interactions to the client stimulates self-management of personal health and service-dedicated health expert ensure an increase of the perceived quality of the eHealth service.
url http://www.researchprotocols.org/2015/1/e32/
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