Reassembling Electronic Patient Records after the National Programme for IT : contested visions and multiple enactments

This thesis is concerned with understanding how Electronic Patient Record systems (EPRs) are being problematised and enacted in NHS acute hospital Trusts following the dismantling of the National Programme for IT (NPfIT). The term EPR is widely used but has no uniform definition and has been applied...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Burns, Martin Clive
Published: University of Brighton 2016
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Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.690842
Description
Summary:This thesis is concerned with understanding how Electronic Patient Record systems (EPRs) are being problematised and enacted in NHS acute hospital Trusts following the dismantling of the National Programme for IT (NPfIT). The term EPR is widely used but has no uniform definition and has been applied to a wide range of systems. In policy, EPRs have often been envisaged as integrated, large-scale systems capable of transforming how healthcare is delivered. However, in practice such systems have proved difficult to achieve and many of the EPRs to be found in hospitals are much smaller standalone specialist departmental systems. Working with Actor-Network Theory (ANT), this thesis takes a sociotechnical approach in which differences in EPRs are understood as matters of ontology (variations in their enactment by multiple heterogeneous actors producing multiple, sometimes conflicting, realities) rather than matters of epistemology (differences in the interpretation of a single underlying reality).