An exploratory study to understand the critical factors affecting the decision to adopt cloud computing in Taiwan hospital |
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Authors: | Jiunn-Woei Lian David C. Yen Yen-Ting Wang |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Information Management, National Taichung University of Science and Technology, 129 Section 3, San-min Road, Taichung 40401, Taiwan;2. School of Economics and Business, 226 Netzer Administration Building, SUNY College at Oneonta, Oneonta, NY 13820, United States |
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Abstract: | The purpose of this study is to investigate the critical factors that will affect the decision to adopt cloud computing technology in developing countries, specifically in Taiwan's hospital industry. This study mainly integrates the TOE (Technology-Organization-Environment) framework and HOT-fit (Human-Organization-Technology fit) model to understand this issue. Information was collected by employing a questionnaire research design to hospital CIOs in Taiwan. The obtained results indicate that the 5 most critical factors are data security, perceived technical competence, cost, top manager support, and complexity. Further, among the proposed four dimensions the most important one is technology followed by human, organizational, and environmental factors. Finally, the results show that significant differences exist in CIO innovativeness, data security, compatibility, top manager support, adequate resource, and perceived industry pressure across different adopting groups. For practitioners, this study identifies key factors for hospitals to make an adoption decision toward cloud computing technology. As for academia, this study can be provided as a useful reference for future studies in this subject field. |
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Keywords: | Critical factor Cloud computing TOE framework HOT-fit model |
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