Pages: 203-242
Interpersonal Deception TheoryInterpersonal deception theory (IDT) represents a merger of interpersonal communication and deception principles designed to better account for deception in interactive contexts. At the same time, it bas the potential to enlighten theories related to ( a ) credibility and truthful communication and ( b ) interpersonal communication. Presented here are key definitions, assumptions related to the critical attributes and key features of interpersonal communication and deception, and 18 general propositions from which specific testable hypotheses can be derived. Research findings relevant to the propositions are also summarized.
To develop, in a collaborative project, core measures of sun exposure and sun protection habits, since the lack of standard outcome measures hampers comparison of population surveys and interventions used in skin cancer prevention research.Design: A work group of investigators evaluated available questionnaire measures of sun exposure and protection. Their deliberations led to a proposed set of core questionnaire items for adults, adolescents aged 11 to 17 years, and children 10 years or younger. These core items were used in cognitive testing by the investigators. Crosssite summaries of methods, response samples, and descriptive data were prepared.
This paper examines the state of the art in mobile clinical and health-related apps. A 2012
estimate puts the number of health-related apps at no fewer than 40,000, as healthcare professionals
and consumers continue to express concerns about the quality of many apps, calling for some form of
app regulatory control or certification to be put in place. We describe the range of apps on offer
as of 2013, and then present a brief survey of evaluation studies of medical and health-related apps
that have been conducted to date, covering a range of clinical disciplines and topics. Our survey
includes studies that highlighted risks, negative issues and worrying deficiencies in existing apps.
We discuss the concept of ‘apps as a medical device’ and the relevant regulatory
controls that apply in USA and Europe, offering examples of apps that have been formally approved
using these mechanisms. We describe the online Health Apps Library run by the National Health
Service in England and the calls for a vetted medical and health app store. We discuss the
ingredients for successful apps beyond the rather narrow definition of ‘apps as a medical
device’. These ingredients cover app content quality, usability, the need to match apps to
consumers’ general and health literacy levels, device connectivity standards (for apps that
connect to glucometers, blood pressure monitors, etc.), as well as app security and user privacy.
‘Happtique Health App Certification Program’ (HACP), a voluntary app certification
scheme, successfully captures most of these desiderata, but is solely focused on apps targeting the
US market. HACP, while very welcome, is in ways reminiscent of the early days of the Web, when many
“similar” quality benchmarking tools and codes of conduct for information publishers
were proposed to appraise and rate online medical and health information. It is probably impossible
to rate and police every app on offer today, much like in those early days of the Web, when people
quickly realised the same regarding informational Web pages. The best first line of defence was, is,
and will always be to educate consumers regarding the potentially harmful content of (some)
apps.
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