Knowledge management, health information technology and nurses' work engagement.

Health Care Manage Rev

Paul H.J. Hendriks, PhD, is Professor of Organizations and Knowledge, Institute for Management Research, Radboud University Nijmegen, The Netherlands. E-mail: Paul E.M. Ligthart, PhD, is Assistant Professor of Strategic Management, Institute for Management Research, Radboud University Nijmegen, The Netherlands. Roel L.J. Schouteten, PhD, is Assistant Professor of Strategic Human Resource Management, Institute for Management Research, Radboud University Nijmegen, The Netherlands.

Published: January 2018

Background: Knowledge management (KM) extends the health information technology (HIT) literature by addressing its impact on creating knowledge by sharing and using the knowledge of health care professionals in hospitals.

Purpose: The aim of the study was to provide insight into how HIT affects nurses' explicit and tacit knowledge of their ongoing work processes and work engagement.

Methodology: Data were collected from 74 nurses in four wards of a Dutch hospital via a paper-and-pencil survey using validated measurement instruments. In a quasiexperimental research design, HIT was introduced in the two experimental wards in contrast to the two control wards. At the time of the HIT introduction, a pretest was administered in all four wards and was followed by a posttest after 3 months. Data were analyzed via partial least squares modeling.

Results: Generally, nurses' tacit knowledge (i.e., their insight into and their capacity to make sense of the work processes) appears to be a significant and strong predictor of their work engagement. In contrast, nurses' explicit knowledge (i.e., information feedback about patients and tasks) only indirectly affects work engagement via its effect on tacit knowledge. Its effect on work engagement therefore depends on the mediating role of tacit knowledge. Interestingly, introducing HIT significantly affects only nurses' explicit knowledge, not their tacit knowledge or work engagement.

Practice Implications: Nurses' tacit and explicit knowledge needs to be systematically distinguished when implementing HIT/KM programs to increase work engagement in the workplace. Tacit knowledge (insight into work processes) appears to be pivotal, whereas efforts aimed only at improving available information will not lead to a higher level of work engagement in nurses' work environments.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/HMR.0000000000000075DOI Listing

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