Case Studies in Knowledge Management

(Michael S) #1
Knowledge Management for Healthcare 341

Copyright © 2005, Idea Group Inc. Copying or distributing in print or electronic forms without written


  • A key constraint would be getting the top management of NHS Trusts to support
    any new projects and that Trusts and hospital administrators had first to recom-
    mend KM products. This would require NHS Trusts and hospital administrators to
    be convinced of the utility of the KM paradigm. This would call for substantiation
    of the results obtained from KM trials, preferably in health-related scenarios.

  • NHS Trusts are now particularly more skeptical and demanding, both in terms of
    service and price, and more so for new innovative ICT products. They felt that the
    KM concept would take a few years to develop into a mature product.

  • The UK solution provider market is driven by the centralized buying procedure of
    the NHS, that is, the NHS Purchasing and Supply Agency, which is currently very
    cost sensitive. The need for a new KM system has to be recommended by the
    Agency.

  • There is no measurement tool that could quantify the impact of the OCKD model
    on the processes of an organization.

  • They also noted that there could be legal liabilities for the sellers of the model in
    case the stated best practices are not properly validated in a healthcare context.

  • An additional key constraint was finance. Building an enterprise-wide CKM would
    require additional funds.

  • Detailed supporting technical documentation for each CKM application had to be
    developed. This would take both time and money.


CONCLUDING COMMENTS

Company X is currently working with several NHS Trusts in an attempt to develop
jointly an enterprise-wide CKM product. It remains convinced on the feasibility of the
KM paradigm solving the problem of information explosion in healthcare. The company
is also in agreement with the fact that the current focus on technological solutions will
aggravate the problem of explosion in clinical information systems for healthcare
institutions. It remains convinced that any potential solution has to come from a domain
that synergistically combines people, organizational processes, and technology, thereby
enabling HSs to have a holistic view of the entire healthcare continuum and that an
enterprise-wide CKM product, based on the OCKD framework, is the first step in this
transformation.


REFERENCES

Blackler, F. (1995). Knowledge, knowledge work and organizations: An overview and
interpretation. Organization Studies, 16(6), 1021-1046.
Davenport, T.H., & Glaser, J. (2002). Just-in-time-delivery comes to knowledge manage-
ment. Harvard Business Review, 80 (7), 107-111.
Davis, M., & Klein, J. (2000, February 7). Net holds breakthrough solutions. Modern
Healthcare, 14.
Deveau, D. (2000). Minds plus matter: Knowledge is business power. Computing
Canada, 26 (8), 14-15.
Free download pdf