Service Provider's Experiences of Service Separation: The Case of Telehealth

被引:55
作者
Green, Teegan [1 ]
Hartley, Nicole [1 ]
Gillespie, Nicole [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Queensland, UQ Business Sch, Bldg 39 Colin Clark,Blair Dr, Brisbane, Qld 4072, Australia
基金
英国医学研究理事会;
关键词
service separation; service providers; technology-infused services; telehealth; qualitative; HEALTH-CARE; CUSTOMER SATISFACTION; RESEARCH PRIORITIES; DELIVERY;
D O I
10.1177/1094670516666674
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
As more and more technologies are infused into service delivery, service providers must continuously renegotiate the ways in which they understand service delivery across increasingly high-tech, low-touch modalities. This exploratory qualitative study examines what health care service providers experience when offering separated services in the empirical context of telehealth. In-depth phenomenographic interviews sourced across multiple hospital and health care sites revealed that service providers experience (1) depersonalization, (2) clinical voyeurism, (3) intangibility negotiation, and (4) a need to manage change around identities and roles. These emergent understandings highlight the individual and qualitatively distinct differences in the ways in which service providers experience service separation in telehealth. Our findings address current service science priorities to leverage technology for service delivery as a way to advance separated service design. Further they provide an understanding-based approach toward building new theories from the service provider's perspective on separation in technology-infused services. Our findings suggest strategies and tactics service providers use to overcome the potential challenges arising from not being physically colocated with their customers during service separation.
引用
收藏
页码:477 / 494
页数:18
相关论文
共 28 条
[1]   Health care: A fertile field for service research [J].
Berry, Leonard L. ;
Bendapudi, Neeli .
JOURNAL OF SERVICE RESEARCH, 2007, 10 (02) :111-122
[2]  
Betancourt R, 2001, ADV APP M-E, V10, P155, DOI 10.1016/S0278-0984(01)10008-8
[3]  
Bitner M.J., 2001, Managing Service Quality, V11, P375, DOI [10.1108/09604520110410584, DOI 10.1108/09604520110410584]
[4]   Technology infusion in service encounters [J].
Bitner, MJ ;
Brown, SW ;
Meuter, ML .
JOURNAL OF THE ACADEMY OF MARKETING SCIENCE, 2000, 28 (01) :138-149
[5]   Mental health professionals' perspectives of telemental health with remote and rural First Nations communities [J].
Gibson, Kerri ;
O'Donnell, Susan ;
Coulson, Heather ;
Kakepetum-Schultz, Tina .
JOURNAL OF TELEMEDICINE AND TELECARE, 2011, 17 (05) :263-267
[6]  
John Graham, 2013, FORBES
[7]   Customer Reactions to Service Separation [J].
Keh, Hean Tat ;
Pang, Jun .
JOURNAL OF MARKETING, 2010, 74 (02) :55-70
[8]  
Lincoln Y., 1985, Naturalistic inquiry, V9, P438, DOI DOI 10.1016/0147-1767(85)90062-8
[9]   Whither services marketing? In search of a new paradigm and fresh perspectives [J].
Lovelock, C ;
Gummesson, E .
JOURNAL OF SERVICE RESEARCH, 2004, 7 (01) :20-41
[10]   Experiences of front-line health professionals in the delivery of telehealth: a qualitative study [J].
MacNeill, Virginia ;
Sanders, Caroline ;
Fitzpatrick, Ray ;
Hendy, Jane ;
Barlow, James ;
Knapp, Martin ;
Rogers, Anne ;
Bardsley, Martin ;
Newman, Stanton P. .
BRITISH JOURNAL OF GENERAL PRACTICE, 2014, 64 (624) :E401-E407