Determinants of cloud computing adoption for health service delivery by public health facilities in Kisumu county, Kenya
Abstract
Cloud computing has emerged as a technological paradigm to reduce Information
Technology (IT) costs, foster collaboration while increasing productivity. Cloud
computing if adopted would offer economic benefits (less capital expenditure, lower
maintenance costs, reduced IT labor costs and energy savings), operational advantages
(enhanced collaboration, improved security, unlimited computing resources and 24-
hour platform) and functional benefits (easy integration because it uses standard
protocols) and these would improve health service delivery. The healthcare sector has
been slower to adopt cloud computing compared to other industries. Furthermore, it
has been established that cloud computing adoption is sector specific due to the
different features and security levels they need and as such, cloud adoption studies
should be sector specific. Locally, there is limited literature concerning the adoption
and benefits of cloud computing in Kenyan healthcare sector. The study was done in
Kisumu County and it focused on 57 public health facilities in the county. This study
was based on a conceptual framework integrated from the Technological Acceptance
Model, Theory of Planned Behaviour and Technology-Organization-Environment
model. The objectives of the study were to assess the extent of cloud computing
adoption, determine the influence of technological factors, establish the influence of
organisational factors and evaluate the influence of behavioural factors in cloud
computing adoption for health service delivery. The target population was 114
healthcare personnel (facility in-charges and health records officers). The sample size
was 88 healthcare personnel and it was computed using Yamane formula (1967) and
sample was drawn using stratified random sampling. The study employed a cross-
sectional study using questionnaires to collect data from respondents. Data analysis
was done using Stata 14.0 software; logistic regression was used to establish the
association of health service delivery and determinants of cloud computing adoption.
The findings showed that cloud computing prevalence was at 53% and these cloud
implementations were deployed as hybrid clouds with Software-as-a-Service (100%)
being the most common implementation. Cloud computing adoption influenced health
service delivery (Odds Ratio [OR]=7.14, p=0.016).The study found out the following
factors to be predictors of cloud computing adoption for health service delivery:
Technological factors (technological infrastructure OR=10.29, p<0.0001; technical
competency OR=12.27, p<0.0001; security OR=7.40, p=0.0010; privacy OR=11.70,
p<0.0001; expert scarcity OR=4.83, p=0.001), organisational factors (Budgetary
allocation for IT OR=2.96, p=0.048; firm size OR=21.79 p<0.0001) and behavioural
factors (Perceived usefulness OR=10.29, p<0.0001, perceived ease of use OR=8.48 ,
p=0.002; social influence OR=3.44 p=0.016). From the study findings, I recommend
increased adoption of cloud computing to improve health service delivery: bottom-up
systems that are unique to facility needs. On technological factors, I recommend,
improvement of technological infrastructure in all facilities. On organisational factors,
I recommend increased budgetary allocation for IT in health facilities. On behavioural
factors, I recommend building the capacity of healthcare personnel in cloud paradigm,
related skills and its benefits. I also suggest that future studies can improve on this
work by diversifying the target population to include other healthcare workers to better
understand use and acceptance of cloud computing for health service delivery.
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