Abstract

PurposeThis paper aims to investigate the eHealth ecosystem’s evolution during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic and its effects on the progression of care for patients with chronic cardiovascular disease.Design/methodology/approachTo attain the aim of the study, this study chose to adopt a qualitative method that matches the complexity of the issue. The study was conducted in a real context through 44 face-to-face semi-structured interviews of key informants at different levels of the Italian eHealth service ecosystem, via Microsoft Teams. The interviews were carried out from June 2020 to January 2021. In this research, we adopted an abductive approach that enabled a process where the theoretical framework and the data analysis evolved at the same time.FindingsThe study results were used to develop a conceptual framework that considers the key factors enabling and constraining the evolutionary process of the eHealth service ecosystem. In particular, the drivers that emerged from the study were actor role empowerment, actor–network engagement and resource reconfiguration while the inhibitors were inter- and intra-actor misalignment, resource myopia and the platformisation gap. The findings also revealed the pivotal role of the meso level in the development of the eHealth service ecosystem, boosted by the COVID-19 pandemic.Originality/valueBy adopting a service ecosystem perspective, this paper contributes, at both a theoretical and a managerial level, to a better understanding of the dynamics related to the diffusion of eHealth. The study identifies the main issues that researchers, managers and policymakers should address to support the evolution of the eHealth service ecosystem, with particular regard to chronic cardiovascular disease.

Highlights

  • The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has challenged global health-care ecosystems (Brodie et al, 2021; Finsterwalder and Kuppelwieser, 2020)

  • This paper proposes a conceptual framework that explains the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on the development of the Italian eHealth service ecosystem, by highlighting the drivers and inhibitors of change processes in eHealth

  • The COVID-19 pandemic has boosted the evolution of the eHealth service ecosystem; the use of digital tools creates opportunities to reconfigure the service ecosystem and to offer high-quality care to patients with chronic cardiovascular diseases

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Summary

Introduction

The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has challenged global health-care ecosystems (Brodie et al, 2021; Finsterwalder and Kuppelwieser, 2020). It has affected people’s private lives, social relationships and the economy. It has affected health-care service providers and patients, causing service mega-disruptions or “unforeseen service market disturbances caused by a pandemic” A reduction of patient transfers to hospitals during the pandemic and the limitation of these transfers only to the most urgent cases have required new solutions for adequate health-care service provision to both COVID-19 and non-COVID-19 patients. Patients with a chronic disease need continuous care; ensuring treatment continuity improves these patients’ quality of life and reduces the negative effects, due for example to non-adherence

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