Cultivating Data Practices Across Boundaries: How Organizations Become Data-Driven

Research output: Contribution to journal/Conference contribution in journal/Contribution to newspaperJournal articleResearchpeer-review

2 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

In this paper, we analyze the efforts of a public healthcare business intelligence unit to implement and disseminate their data products and thus make the healthcare organization more data-driven. The paper is based on ethnographic fieldwork in a healthcare business intelligence unit (the BIU) whose mission is to improve healthcare efficiency and quality by making data and data analyses available to healthcare managers and staff. Their primary products consist of a data warehouse and Data Reports, both providing curated and daily updated data for healthcare staff to analyze and visualize. We conceptualize these Data Reports and the data warehouse as boundary objects through which cooperation around data between various users is achieved. Our focus is on the BIU’s efforts to introduce and promote the use of boundary objects to healthcare staff while providing them with the competencies to use them in practice. Efforts that we conceptualize as collaborative boundary work through which a new joint field of working with data is created between the BIU and healthcare staff. Based on the analysis of the ethnographic fieldwork, we point to three important aspects in creating this new joint field: Mobilizing interest, building local capabilities, and propagating data locally. The paper makes three contributions: It adds to our understanding of how new joint fields can be cultivated through collaborative boundary work to make healthcare data-driven; it contributes to the emergent field of data work studies; and finally, it adds to the largely normative literature on business intelligence and self-service business intelligence through an ethnographic analysis of its efforts to make healthcare data-driven.
Original languageEnglish
JournalComputer Supported Cooperative Work
Volume33
Pages (from-to)1177-1221
Number of pages45
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2024

Keywords

  • Boundary objects
  • Business Intelligence
  • Collaborative Boundary Work
  • Data work
  • Data-driven
  • Ethnography
  • Healthcare
  • Self-service Business Intelligence

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Cultivating Data Practices Across Boundaries: How Organizations Become Data-Driven'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.
  • ECSCW 2024

    Pedersen, A. M. (Speaker) & Bossen, C. (Participant)

    21 Jun 2024

    Activity: Participating in or organising an event typesParticipation in or organisation af a conference

Cite this