@article {764, title = {eHealth: Redefining Health Care in the Light of Technology}, year = {2008}, month = {2008}, pages = {357 - 362}, abstract = {Information and communication technology is now the major enabler for healthcare organizations on many levels{\textemdash} national, regional and local{\textemdash}hoping to achieve structural and cultural change in healthcare provision; for example, the UK{\textquoteright}s NPfIT (National Program for IT) and the National Health Information Initiative in the United States. Final NPfIT costs are variously estimated from {\textsterling}12billion to {\textsterling}31 billion. Major initiatives are also underway in other developed as well as developing economies to address healthcare issues with eHealth technologies. }, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-0-387-09768-8_28}, author = {Chiasson, Mike and Flynn, Donal and Bonnie Kaplan and Lehoux, Pascale and LeRouge, Cynthia} } @article {372, title = {Virtual Patients}, year = {2007}, pages = {397 - 401}, abstract = {In medical education and clinical care, representations of the patient help health care teams in planning and coordinating patient care, sometimes over geographic distances. This takes forms ranging from telemedicine consultations to using simulations and information and communication technology representations to plan, and at times, perform clinical procedures such as are done in intensive care units or in surgery. The increasing reliance on computer-mediated interaction in health care generally is considered the means to more efficient, equitable, and cost-effective care with reduced errors. Clinical work, then, may be carried out with simulated images and processes rather than through such physical processes as examining the patient directly. Instead of treating the actual person, one result may be that clinicians are treating computer-mediated representations of that person. This session explores virtuality in health care environments, with a particular focus on the virtual patient. Panelists discuss treating representations of patients by addressing how: (1) usability studies reveal the extent to which physicians may pay more attention to representations of the patient condition rather than to the actual patient, (2) images may be considered as more real than the patient, (3) different graphic representations of patient data have different consequences, and (4) virtuality affects quality of care in virtual intensive care units. From different research and theoretical perspectives and studies in these different environments with different technologies, panelists discuss repercussions of virtuality on teamwork and service delivery in health care. Their presentations of developments leading towards virtual patients point towards significant issues of virtuality in other environments.}, doi = {10.1007/978-0-387-73025-7_31}, author = {Bonnie Kaplan and Elkin, Peter and Gorman, Paul and Koppel, Ross and Sites, Frank and Talmon, Jan} } @article {305, title = {Ubiquitous Computing for Health and Medicine}, year = {2005}, pages = {355 - 358}, abstract = {Without Abstract}, doi = {10.1007/0-387-28918-6_28}, author = {Atkinson, Chris and Bonnie Kaplan and Larson, Kent and Martins, Henrique and Lundell, Jay and Harris, Martin} } @article {235, title = {Crossing Disciplinary Boundaries: Reflections on Information Systems Research in Health Care and the State of Information Systems}, year = {2004}, month = {2004}, pages = {657 - 658}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/1-4020-8095-6_39}, author = {Barber, Nicholas and Brennan, Patricia and Chiasson, Mike and Tony Cornford and Elizabeth Davidson and Bonnie Kaplan and Klecu{\'n}, Ela} } @article {912, title = {The Great Quantitative / Qualitative Debate: The Past, Present, and Future of Positivism and Post-Positivism in Information Systems}, year = {2004}, note = {IFIP, International Federation of Information Processing}, pages = {659-660}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, address = {Norwell, MA}, author = {Michael D. Myers and Straub, Detmar W and Mingers, John and Geoff Walsham}, editor = {Bonnie Kaplan and Duane P. Truex and Wastell, David and Wood-Harper, A T and Janice I. DeGross} } @article {467, title = {Panel: New insights into studying agency and information technology}, year = {2004}, pages = {653-654}, publisher = {Kluwer}, address = {Boston}, url = {IFIP822004.pdf}, author = {Tony Salvador and Jeremy Rose and Edgar A. Whitley and Melanie Wilson}, editor = {Bonnie Kaplan and Duane P. Truex III, and Wastell, David and A. Trevor Wood-Harper and Janice I. DeGross} } @article {841, title = {Twenty Years of Applying Grounded Theory in Information Systems: A Coding Method, Useful Theory Generation Method, or an Orthodox Positivist Method of Data Analysis?}, year = {2004}, pages = {649-650}, publisher = {Kluwer Academic Publishers}, address = {Norwell, MA}, author = {Bryant, Tony and Hughes, Jim and Michael D. Myers and Trauth, E.M. and Cathy Urquhart}, editor = {Bonnie Kaplan and Duane P. Truex and Wastell, David and Wood-Harper, A T and Janice I. DeGross} } @article {276, title = {Young Turks, Old Guardsmen, and the Conundrum of the Broken Mold: A Progress Report on Twenty Years of Information Systems Research}, year = {2004}, month = {2004}, pages = {1 - 18}, url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/1-4020-8095-6_1}, author = {Bonnie Kaplan and Duane P. Truex and Wastell, David and Wood-Harper, A.} } @article {DBLP:conf/ifip8-2/KaplanKST02, title = {New Words and Old Books: Challenging Conventional Discourses about Domain and Theory in Information Systems Research}, year = {2002}, pages = {539-545}, author = {Bonnie Kaplan and Lynette Kvasny and Steve Sawyer and Eileen M. Trauth} } @inbook {857, title = {Learning and Teaching Qualitative Research: A View from Reference Disciplines of History and Anthropology}, booktitle = {Organizational and Social Perspectives on Information Technology}, year = {2000}, pages = {511-515}, publisher = {Kluwer}, organization = {Kluwer}, address = {Norwell, MA}, author = {Bonnie Kaplan and Jonathan Liebenau and Michael D. Myers and Eleanor Wynn}, editor = {Baskerville, R. and Stage, J and DeGross, J I} } @article {DBLP:conf/ifip8-2/KaplanLMW00, title = {Learning and Teaching Qualitative Research: A View from the Reference Disciplines of Anthropology and History}, year = {2000}, pages = {511-516}, author = {Bonnie Kaplan and Jonathan Liebenau and Michael D. Myers and Eleanor Wynn} } @article {DBLP:conf/ifip8-2/AartsGHK00, title = {Successful Development, Implementation, and Evaluation of Information Systems: Does Healthcare Serve as a Model for Networked Organizations?}, year = {2000}, pages = {517-520}, author = {Jos Aarts and Els Goorman and Heather Heathfield and Bonnie Kaplan} } @article {DBLP:conf/ifip8-2/KaplanFF99, title = {Research and Ethical Issues Arising from Ethnographic Interviews of Patients{\textquoteright} Reactions to an Intelligent Interactive Telephone Health Behavior Advisor}, year = {1999}, pages = {67-78}, author = {Bonnie Kaplan and Ramesh Farzanfar and Robert H. Freeman} }