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Author Ahbabi, Jawaher Majdi Al, author

Title Using health-care technology to manage COVID-19 pandemic : a case of Al-Ain city hospital, UAE / authored by Jawaher Majdi Al Ahbabi (Management Department, College of Business, Abu Dhabi University, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates) and Syed Zamberi Ahmad (Management Department, College of Business, Abu Dhabi University, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates)
Published Bingley, U.K. : Emerald Publishing Limited, 2021
©2021

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Description 1 online resource (18 pages)
Series Emerald emerging markets case studies ; vol. 11, no. 3
Notes Learning outcomes: The teaching objectives of the case study will enable the students as follows: to recognise the challenges of information technology (IT) implementation in the health-care sector associated with employee resistance, to apply the technology acceptance model for analysing the degree of employee resistance, to relate the utilisation of Kotter's 8-step change management approach in successful IT implementation in the health-care sector and maintenance of employee productivity and to classify the leadership traits reflected by the leaders in training the 600 diverse employee population of Al-Ain hospital
Case overview/synopsis: The case highlighted the predicament the government-owned Al-Ain City Hospital, United Arab Emirates, faced following the surge in the incidences of COVID-19 in the country in March 2020. The hospital management decided to initiate the work-from-home arrangement as a non-pharmaceutical intervention of handling the spread of the disease amongst its employees. Fatima Almur, the Information Technology Director in Al-Ain Hospital, asked the Application Support Manager, Aysha Shahwan, to deploy some IT tools significant for remote support to patient care within two weeks. Shahwan faced significant challenges in deploying the IT tools in two weeks given the diverse workforce, with the majority of them having limited knowledge in operating the tools, and hence, their apprehension in the usefulness of the tools. Besides, Shahwan had to deploy some advanced tools for easy and secured access to the electronic health record, telemedicine and telecommuting using mobile phones, tablets or PCs. The deployment of these advanced tools would be jeopardised by employee acceptance and consequent dwindling productivity. Considering the issue of employee acceptance of the change and their limited knowledge, Shahwan had, therefore, to develop training frameworks to boost the former's perceived usefulness and ease-of-use of the IT tools. Will Shahwan successfully deploy the advanced IT tools to enable the hospital staff, including medical staff and departments, to ensure efficient patient care from a remote location? Will she be able to train the 600 employees across genders, ages and knowledge, use the IT tools and safeguard them from common software threats like email phishing and ransomware? Will the hospital be able to sustain its vision of quality patient care using advanced technologies through this new arrangement of remote support amidst the pandemic when patients are more?
Complexity academic level: Undergraduate business management
Supplementary materials: Teaching Notes are available for educators only
Subject code: CSS 10: Public sector management
Print version record
Subject Medical telematics -- United Arab Emirates -- Case studies
Medical personnel -- Training of -- United Arab Emirates -- Case studies
Medical, Telemedicine.
Telemedicine.
Form Electronic book
Author Adham, Syed Zamberi, author