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The Role of Information Completeness in EHealth

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Surfing-Searching. Dependent Measures. Attitude (Issue, Article, Website) ... Surfing. Completeness. Web Use Motivation. Means .02. n.s. .926. 2. Web use motivation X ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Role of Information Completeness in EHealth


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(No Transcript)
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Health Communication on the Web Information
Completeness as a Quality Criterion
  • Dr. Mohan J. Dutta-Bergman
  • Health Communication, Purdue University

3
Current Trends
  • Increasing consumer health information seeking on
    the Internet (Dutta-Bergman, 2004a, 2004b,
    Eysenbach et al., 2002, Napoli, 2000)
  • Increasing number of health-related Websites
  • Growing concern regarding the quality of health
    information on the Internet (Eysenbach et al.,
    2002)

4
What is Completeness?
  • Having all necessary parts, elements, or steps
  • All key elements (Eysenbach et al., 2002)

5
Importance of Completeness
  • Evaluation of health websites (Expert
    perspective)
  • Consumer health outcomes
  • Consumer decision making
  • Website-related outcomes
  • Physician-patient relationship

6
Elements of Completeness
  • Theory
  • Claim
  • Grounds
  • Warrants
  • Backing
  • Method
  • Side effects
  • Limitations

7
Completeness
METHOD
THEORY
SIDE EFFECTS
LIMITATIONS
8
Two Studies
  • Experimental Design
  • To measure the effect of completeness on
  • Consumer Health Attitudes
  • Consumer Health Intentions
  • Attitude toward Website
  • Intention toward Website
  • Credibility Evaluations

9
Study Design
  • 2 X 3 Design
  • Information Completeness
  • Complete
  • Incomplete
  • Jargon
  • Surfing-Searching
  • Dependent Measures
  • Attitude (Issue, Article, Website)
  • Intention (Issue, Website)
  • Website Credibility

10
Sample Characteristics
  • 246 Respondents
  • Undergraduates enrolled in journalism classes
  • 151 females and 87 males
  • Mean age 21 years
  • Mean number of hours spent on the Internet 21
    years
  • Average Internet experience 6 years
  • Randomly assigned to each of the 6 cells in the 2
    X 3 design

11
Measures
  • 3 Pilot studies and 2 pre-tests
  • Surfing-Searching
  • Completeness
  • Dependent Measures
  • Attitude toward the Issue
  • Intention toward the issue
  • Attitude toward the Website
  • Intention toward the Website

12
Measuring Completeness
13
Table 1 ANOVA of Between-Subject Effects of
Completeness and Web Use Motivation on Attitude
toward the Issue
Note Different superscripts for the column
totals reflect a significant difference between
the completeness means at plt .001 level. Means
sharing the same superscript are not
significantly different from each other in their
completeness levels.
14
Table 2 ANOVA of Between-Subject Effects of
Completeness and Web Use Motivation on Attitude
toward the Article
Note Different superscripts for the column
totals reflect a significant difference between
the completeness means at plt .001 level. Means
sharing the same superscript are not
significantly different from each other.
15
Table 3 ANOVA of Between-Subject Effects of
Completeness and Web Use Motivation on Attitude
toward the Website
Note 1 Different superscripts for the column
totals reflect a significant difference between
the completeness means at plt .001 level. Means
sharing the same superscript are not
significantly different from each other. Note
2 Different superscripts for the row totals
reflect a significant difference between the web
use motivation means at plt .001 level.
16
Table 4 ANOVA of Between-Subject Effects of
Completeness and Web Use Motivation on Intention
toward the Issue
Note 1 Different superscripts for the column
totals reflect a significant difference between
the completeness means at plt .001 level. Means
sharing the same superscript are not
significantly different from each other. Note
2 Different superscripts for the row totals
reflect a significant difference between the web
use motivation means at plt .001 level.
17
Table 5 ANOVA of Between-Subject Effects of
Completeness and Web Use Motivation on Intention
toward the Website
Note 1 Different superscripts for the column
totals reflect a significant difference between
the completeness means at plt .001 level. Means
sharing the same superscript are not
significantly different from each other. Note
2 Different superscripts for the row totals
reflect a significant difference between the web
use motivation means at plt .001 level.
18
Completeness Credibility
  • Completeness positively influences user
    assessment of source credibility
  • Completeness positively influences user
    assessment of website credibility

19
Conclusions
  • Completeness of health information plays a key
    role in patient decision making
  • Completeness influences Attitude and Intention
    with respect to the issue.
  • Completeness influences additional health
    information seeking

20
Completeness Branding
  • Completeness influences Attitude and Intention in
    the context of the Website
  • Completeness influences credibility of the
    Website (Key Element in branding)

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Directions for future research
  • Measure the relationship between completeness and
    outcomes in the context of actual health
    websites
  • Evaluate the role of completeness in a nationally
    representative sample
  • Evaluate the role of completeness in
    disease-specific groups
  • Evaluate the role of completeness in underserved
    segments
  • Rural
  • Uninsured

22
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