The paper examines the constructs that instigate the users to adopt digital wallets and continued usage behavior in a developing country perspective, Bangladesh. The researcher used a cross-sectional design to collect the primary data using a self-administered questionnaire. The population consisted of the youth, precisely 18–35, who are tech-savvy and knowledgeable about new technology. The study followed the nonprobability purposive sampling technique, and 330 responses were collected through a structured questionnaire survey. In direct path analysis, the findings revealed that perceived usefulness, ease of use, compatibility, insecurity, and behavioral intention to adopt digital wallets found significant relationships among the constructs that supported the proposed hypotheses. Moreover, indirect path analysis of perceived compatibility, perceived personal innovativeness and perceived social influence found no significant relationships that did not justify the proposed hypotheses. Users' behavioral intention partially mediates among perceived usefulness, ease of use, personal innovativeness, and perceived social influence, except perceived compatibility. The findings suggested that perceived technological innovativeness did not support the proposed hypothesis. The incorporated constructs of this study have hardly been found in the existing literature, and the researchers shed light on the unexplored research area. The study results, implications, and limitations have been discussed.
The purpose of this research is to explore how the social needs, social values, and social influences affect the university students' smartphone dependency in Bangladesh perspectives. The researcher used structured survey methods and a non-probability convenience sampling procedure to collect the primary data. For data analysis purposes, the SmartPLS software was used. The data was collected from both undergraduate and master's students, and 532 respondents' data set was considered to analyze the proposed hypotheses. The analysis results indicated that social needs, social values, and social influences have a positive relationship and significantly influence university students' smartphone dependency. The study focused on smartphone dependency of university students, which has become one of the crucial gadgets to carry among the youth. The demand for smartphone usage is significantly increasing in Bangladesh, and previous studies have not been focused on this area. The research limitations of this study are also presented, and the authors suggested directions of future research as well.
The COVID-19 pandemic outbreak has changed the conventional method of interacting with healthcare personnel. The rapid adaptation of telemedicine facilities has commuted alternative medical facilities in emergency circumstances. The physicians, nurses, and patients all are adopting telemedicine rapidly under this COVID-19 health system pressure. The reduction of PPE usage increases in video consultations is the positive result of using telemedicine. Nevertheless, front-liners also confront some challenges of using telemedicine including proper infrastructure facilities, lack of physical examination, patient's privacy, and proper diagnosis. Telemedicine-specific legislation must be implemented to ensure patient digital security and set appropriate prices for e-health treatment. These simple e-health technologies may allow infected COVID-19 patients to communicate with one another and acquire relevant health information more readily, resulting in a higher quality of life and better mental health.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.