AIS SIG-Health Sponsored Workshop

December 11, 2016 – Dublin Ireland, 1:00pm – 6:00pm, The Spencer Hotel, Room “Pegasus 2”

The SIG Health Workshop is a pre-conference activity of the International Conference on Information Systems (ICIS) hosted by the Special Interest Group Health IT (SIGHEALTH). It provides a forum for those working on information technology in the context of healthcare. We welcome both research-in-progress and completed work on a broad range of topics and methodologies. Authors do not have to be SIG-Health members to participate.

The papers will not be included in conference proceedings and so authors retain all copyrights to their work. However, accepted papers will be listed with author names, affiliations and title on the AIS SIG-Health website. Authors will have the option to include their final extended abstract on the website as well.

The workshop is restricted to 35 participants and will include presentations and roundtable discussions. All submitted work will be reviewed by the co-chairs and other workshop authors. All accepted papers will then be presented and discussed during roundtable discussions to provide authors with help, feedback, suggestions, and to facilitate future collaborations. We will have 3-5 authors per table to facilitate discussion. The two papers with highest review scores will be presented to all workshop attendees. The interactive format of the workshop is geared towards providing a high degree of feedback to authors with promising early-stage work, but is certainly open to developed and completed research as well.

sig-health-2016-agenda

The workshop fees are shown below.

Promising submissions will be invited for potential publications in a special issue in one of two journals: Health Policy and Technology or Health Systems.

  • Health Policy and Technology (HPT) is a cross-disciplinary journal which focuses on past, present and future health policy and the role of technology in clinical and non-clinical health environments. As a peer-reviewed journal, it aims to foster closer links with policy-makers, health professionals, health technology providers, patient groups and academia. Health Policy and Technology has been accepted by Thomson Reuters for indexing and inclusion in the Social Science Citation Index.
  • Health Systems is an interdisciplinary journal promoting the idea that all aspects of health and healthcare delivery can be viewed from a systems perspective. The principal aim of the journal is to bring together critical disciplines that have proved themselves already in health, and to leverage these contributions by providing a forum that brings together diverse viewpoints and research approaches. Health Systems has been accepted into the Thomson Reuters “Emerging Sources Citation Index” and is assessed for the SCI or SSCI (which is in process). PubMed, Medline, and ABI Inform indexing will shortly follow.

The authors should indicate during submission if they wish to be considered for the special issue and select a journal. We will work with the journal editors to identify promising submissions. The authors of selected submissions will be invited to complete their research and write a full length manuscript for submission to the journals. Each manuscript can be submitted to one journal only. Authors retain the right to reject the invitation (not participate in special issue). Acceptance of the invitation to a special issue is no guarantee for publication. Both journals will consider a variety of topics but the following topics have been suggested as being a particularly good fit:

Health Policy and Technology:
  • Comparative country studies on Health IT
  • Mobile health data security
  • Regulation of health devices and applications
  • Health IT in developing countries
  • Electronic Health
  • Managing Large-scale Health IT Projects
Health Systems:
  • Interdisciplinary work is of special interest
  • Design Science, Decision Support Systems, Mobile Health, Telemedicine
  • Data Mining/ Data Analytics in Healthcare
  • Workflow and Task Analysis, Human Computer Interaction in Health Systems
  • Health System Quality and Evaluation
  • Health Disparities
  • Consumer Health Informatics, Nursing Informatics, Public Health Informatics, Clinical Informatics
Submission Instructions:

We will request extended abstracts for presentation at the workshop. Papers must be in English, and need to contain original research. Only one paper per first author will be accepted.

To submit a paper:
  • Submit your work below
  • You will be asked for author names and affiliation and whether you want to be consider for the journal special issues.
  • Create a single pdf file containing an extended abstract that is no longer than five pages (blinded, 11-pt font, one-inch margins on four sides, double-spaced).

By submitting, the author team agrees to perform (at most) two reviews of other abstracts submitted to the workshop.

Important dates:
  • Deadline for workshop submissions: Sunday, September 18. Submissions are now closed.
  • Deadline for reviews: Sunday October 2, 2016
  • Notification of Acceptance: October 7, 2016 (target date)
  • Workshop: December 11, 2016, 1:00pm to 6:00pm, The Spencer Hotel

Papers selected for potential publication in one of the associated journals will be asked for a full paper submission after the workshop.

Note: Papers invited to journal fast track will be required to write a full paper. The submission date will be after the workshop (TBD). This version will need to complete the work to a sufficient standard for the journals and take all reviewer comments into account. A review cycle will follow this submission.

Workshop Advisory Board

TBD. If you are interested in being on the advisory board, please contact the workshop chairs.

Workshop Fees

Every effort was taken by workshop organizes to make the workshop as affordable as possible, given the constraints of the venue. Those with a paper accepted can register either as an additional meeting to ICIS or for a $20 fee register for the workshop only. The workshop fees, for the those attending ICIS as well, are shown below. Those who wish to attend only the workshop and not register for ICIS will pay $20 in addition to the fees shown below.

AIS Member Type Early Bird Regular Onsite
Academic Member 100 110 110
Professional Member 110 120 120
Student Member 80 85 85
Non-Member 130 140 140
Workshop Chairs:

Matt Wimble, PhD
2016 SIG Health Workshop Co-Chair
Assistant Professor, University of Michigan – Dearborn
wimble@umich.edu

Gondy Leroy, PhD
2016 SIG Health Workshop Co-Chair
Associate Professor, University of Arizona
gondyleroy@email.arizona.edu

Wendy Currie, PhD
2016 SIG Health Workshop Co-Chair
Professor, Audencia Business School (France)
wcurrie@audencia.com

Submissions have now ended.

We would like to congratulate the following authors on the acceptance in the 2016 SIGHealth Workshop:

Suzanne Weisband
University of Arizona
Usability of mHealth Apps: A Review and Guidelines
Renee M. E. Pratt
University of Massacusetts – Amherst
The Benefits of Implementing Open Source-based EHRs: A case study
Changmi Jung, Rema Padman, Linda Argote, Ateev Mehrotra
Johns Hopkins University, Carnegie Mellon University, Carnegie Mellon University, Harvard University
Impact of Organizational Usage Experience on Service Operation Efficiency: A Study of Online Care Delivery
Elizabeth A. Regan, Ajmal Agha
University of South Carolina
The Impact of Health Information Technology: Critical Role of Executive Leadership in Achieving Value
Hamzah Ibrahim
Claremont Graduate University
Development and Evaluation of a Self-Monitoring Complexity Index (SMCI) using Mobile Health
Nilesh Saraf
Simon Fraser University
Social Media and Mental Health: Investigating Behavioral Contagion of Celebrity Suicides
Steven Mertens, Frederik Gailly, Geert Poels
Ghent University
Discovering and Modelling Healthcare Processes: DeciClare
Haibo Hao
University of Massachusetts Boston
Digitial Divide in Online Health Utilization in China: A Case Study of Geographic Health Analytics
Victoria Kisekka
University of Albany
The healthcare socio-technical system: An extension of the DeLone and McLean IS Success Model
Pasi Karppinen
University of Oulu
Studying behavior change by Using Outcome/Change matrix
Sohyun In, Chunghan Kang, Junghoon Moon(Corresponding author)
Seoul National University
Use of a Healthcare Management System to Manage Weight: Perspectives from Protection Motivation Theory
Josianne Marsan, Anne-Marie Croteau, Luc K. Audebrand, Nura Jabagi
Université Laval, Concordia University, Université Laval, Concordia University,
Healthcare Service Innovation Based on Information Technology
Wen Yong Chua
National University of Singapore
An Investigation of Individual’s Willingness to Adopt Wearable Devices with Personal Health Record System on Healthcare Quality
G Kenny, C Heavin, Y O’Connor, E Eze, E Ndibuagu
University College Cork, University College Cork, University College Cork, Enugu State University College of Medicine
Towards a Shared Mental Model: A Case of Mobile Health Intervention in Nigeria, Africa
Mayank Kumar and Jang Bahadur Singh
Indian Institute of Management Tiruchirappalli
Multi-Level Perspective on User Resistance of Health Information Technology: A Conceptual Model
Sumate Permwonguswa, Jiban Khuntia, Dobin Yim, Dawn Gregg
University of Colorado Denver, University of Colorado Denver, Fordham University,University of Colorado Denver
Influence of Information Systems in Managing Self-Esteem: Evidence from a Health Infomediary
Debra Burleson
Baylor University
ICT Implementation: Identifying Users’ Perceptions of Patient-Medical Provider Communication
Trevor Clohessy, Grace Kenny
National University of Ireland, University College Cork
The Impact of Gamification on mHealth Fitness Application Privacy Literacy
Edin Smailhodzic; Albert Boonstra; David J. Langley
University of Groningen
Effects of patients’ social media use on the doctor-patient relationship
Aideen Lawlor, Dr Ciara Heavin, Dr Yvonne OConnor, Laura Lynch
University College Cork
Predicting Decision Autonomy Through Situated Awareness: Towards a Better Understanding of Informed Consent on Health Social Network Sites
Stephen McCarthy, Paidi O’Raghallaigh, Ciara Fitzgerald, Frédéric Adam
University College Cork
The Participatory Design of HIT Solutions: A Case Study on the Challenges of Interdisciplinary Stakeholder Involvement
Paidi ORaghallaigh, Stephen Lane, Frederic Adam, David Sammon
University College Cork
Using Boundary Objects to Determine Software Requirements – An Exploratory Case Study from Healthcare
Ofir Ben-Assuli, Bruce Rosen, Orit Karnieli-Miller
Ono Academic College, Meyers-JDC-Brookdale Institute, Tel-Aviv University
Adoption of Israeli HIE System: National Study
Ofir Ben Assuli, Rema Padman, Itamar Shabtai
Ono Academic College, Carnegie Mellon University, College of Management Academic Studies Rishon LeTsiyon
Analyzing Frequent Hospital Readmissions
Rema Padman, Malte Ganssauge
Carnegie Mellon University, TU Munich
Exploring dynamic risk prediction for dialysis patients
Ranganathan C & Ali Tafti
University of Illinois – Chicago
Use of Twitter by US Healthcare Organizations: Assessing the Social Influence of Tweets
Alessandro Zardini
University of Verona
Lights and Shadows in the implementation of the electronic medical record: a comparative case studies
Andy Weeger, Heiko Gewald and Corinna Gewald
Neu-Ulm University of Applied Sciences
Is it that only money matters? A cross-national analysis of health information system usage