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A manifesto for a socio-technical approach to NHS and social care IT-enabled business change - to deliver effective high quality health and social care for all

Authors :
Clegg, Chris
Ellis, Beverley
Wyatt, Jeremy
Elliott, Bruce
Sinclair, Mike
Wastell, David
Clegg, Chris
Ellis, Beverley
Wyatt, Jeremy
Elliott, Bruce
Sinclair, Mike
Wastell, David
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

80% of IT projects are known to fail. Adopting a socio-technical approach will help them to succeed in the future. The socio-technical proposition is simply that any work system comprises both a social system (including the staff, their working practices, job roles, culture and goals) and a technical system (the tools and technologies that support and enable work processes). These elements together form a single system comprising interacting parts. The technical and the social elements need to be jointly designed (or redesigned) so that they are congruent and support one another in delivering a better service. Focusing on one aspect alone is likely to be sub-optimal and wastes money (Clegg, 2008). Thus projects that just focus on the IT will almost always fail to deliver the full benefits.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1137478424
Document Type :
Electronic Resource