2019
DOI: 10.3390/ijerph16183348
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Characterizing Consumer Behavior in Leveraging Social Media for E-Patient and Health-Related Activities

Abstract: The emergence of e-patients has encouraged consumers, people who are non-medical experts, to be more engaged in healthcare needs by utilizing online sources via social media. However, the nature of social media and regulation issues have caused concerns for the reliability and validity of the shared information. These phenomena shape consumers behavior in leveraging social media for e-patient activities. This study investigates consumer behavior using an integrated model based on the Unified Theory of Acceptan… Show more

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Cited by 34 publications
(28 citation statements)
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“…Without adherence, the patient loses the choices to embrace the full range of benefits related to the continuity of care. In line with this, several studies have focused on factors enhancing positive effects of e-patient activities, named as the non-medical people involved in own healthcare management by technological systems ( 51 , 52 ). Also, adherence to treatment, mirroring patient's motivation, reflects the patient's empowerment in his/her own health management, in line with the phenomenon of e-patients ( 53 ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Without adherence, the patient loses the choices to embrace the full range of benefits related to the continuity of care. In line with this, several studies have focused on factors enhancing positive effects of e-patient activities, named as the non-medical people involved in own healthcare management by technological systems ( 51 , 52 ). Also, adherence to treatment, mirroring patient's motivation, reflects the patient's empowerment in his/her own health management, in line with the phenomenon of e-patients ( 53 ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…From a doctor's perspective in eHealth, if a doctor's desire to serve patients well is strong, he/she will be willing to perform specific actions to attain the desire [14,22], such as offering free and paid counseling services. In the literature, performance expectations have been validated as essential factors affecting behavioral intentions [23,24]. Therefore, this study hypothesizes the following: Hypothesis 5 (H5).…”
Section: Performance Expectations and Effort Intentionsmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…A survey of 366 healthcare workers in the USA revealed that healthcare workers are not familiar with their workplace policies concerning social media use, which may cause a privacy breach of confidential medical information [79]. Recent studies also highlighted the importance of supporting conditions on social media usage behaviour [80][81][82]. Thus, it will be interesting to observe the relationship between supporting conditions and perceived usefulness in healthcare context.…”
Section: E Supporting Conditionsmentioning
confidence: 99%