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Table 2 (a) Respondent characteristics and descriptive statistics for (b) perceptions, (c) acceptance, and (d) use

From: Nurses’ perceptions, acceptance, and use of a novel in-room pediatric ICU technology: testing an expanded technology acceptance model

(a) Respondent characteristics (N = 167)

Count (%)

 Age

  18–29

73 (44.8)

  30–39

52 (31.9)

  40–49

19 (11.7)

  50–59

15 (9.2)

  60+

4 (2.5)

 Gender

 Female

150 (91.5)

 Race and ethnicity

 White/European American

157 (96.9)

 Black/African American

2 (1.2)

 Asian

1 (0.6)

 American Indian/Alaska Native

1 (0.6)

 No response

5 (3.0)

 % Hispanic, of those responding

5 (3.1)

 Years of experience with any EHR/current EHR

  0–1

9 (5.7)/31 (18.8)

  1–2

19 (12.0)/30 (18.2)

  2–3

77 (48.7)/104 (63.0)

   > 3

53 (33.5)/0 (0.0)

 Years at hospital

  Mean (SD)

8.9 (9.2)

(b) Perceptions (N = 167)

Mean (SD)

 Perceived ease of use, expanded

3.88 (1.52)

 Perceived usefulness, traditional

2.03 (1.71)

 Perceived usefulness for patient/family involvement, contextualized

2.58 (1.81)

 Perceived usefulness for care delivery, contextualized

2.05 (1.79)

 Social influence, institutional

2.84 (1.70)

 Social influence, patient/family

2.04 (1.91)

 Training on system

1.06 (1.39)

(c) Acceptance (N = 167)

Mean (SD)

 Satisfaction with system

2.16 (1.66)

 Intention to use system

2.32 (1.62)

(d) Use (N = 167)

Mean (SD)

 Complete use of system

1.89 (1.52)

  1. EHR electronic health record system; The response scale for perceptions, acceptance, and use was 0 (not at all), 1 (a little), 2 (some), 3 (a moderate amount), 4 (pretty much), 5 (quite a lot), 6 (a great deal)