Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W2005070837> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 95 of
95
with 100 items per page.
- W2005070837 endingPage "e21" @default.
- W2005070837 startingPage "e21" @default.
- W2005070837 abstract "The recent surge in online health information and consumer use of such information has led to expert speculations and prescriptions about the credibility of health information on the World Wide Web. In spite of the growing concern over online health information sources, existing research reveals a lacuna in the realm of consumer evaluations of trustworthiness of different health information sources on the Internet.This study examines consumer evaluation of sources of health information on the World Wide Web, comparing the demographic, attitudinal, and cognitive differences between individuals that most trust a particular source of information and individuals that do not trust the specific source of health information. Comparisons are made across a variety of sources.The Porter Novelli HealthStyles database, collected annually since 1995, is based on the results of nationally-representative postal-mail surveys. In 1999, 2636 respondents provided usable data for the HealthStyles database. Independent sample t tests were conducted to compare the respondents in the realm of demographic, attitudinal, and cognitive variables.The most trusted sources of online health information included the personal doctor, medical university, and federal government. The results demonstrated significant differences in demographic and health-oriented variables when respondents who trusted a particular online source were compared with respondents that did not trust the source, suggesting the need for a segmented approach to research and application. Individuals trusting the local doctor were younger (t2634 = 4.02, P <.001) and held stronger health beliefs (F1 = 5.65, P =.018); individuals trusting the local hospital were less educated (t2634 = 3.83, P <.001), low health information oriented (F1 = 6.41, P =.011), and held weaker health beliefs (F1 = 5.56, P =.018). Respondents with greater trust in health insurance companies as online health information sources were less educated (t2634 = 1.90, P =.05) and less health information oriented (F1 = 4.30, P =.04). Trust in medical universities was positively associated with education (t2634 = 11.83, P <.001), income (t2634 = 10.19, P <.001), and health information orientation (F1 = 10.32, P <.001). Similar results were observed in the realm of federal information credibility, with individuals with greater trust in federal sources being more educated (t2634 = 7.45, P <.001) and health information oriented (F1 = 4.45, P =.04) than their counterparts.The results suggest systematic differences in the consumer segment based on the different sources of health information trusted by the consumer. While certain sources such as the local hospital and the health insurance company might serve as credible sources of health information for the lower socioeconomic and less health-oriented consumer segment, sources such as medical universities and federal Web sites might serve as trustworthy sources for the higher socioeconomic and more health-oriented groups." @default.
- W2005070837 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W2005070837 creator A5035963484 @default.
- W2005070837 date "2003-09-25" @default.
- W2005070837 modified "2023-10-04" @default.
- W2005070837 title "Trusted Online Sources of Health Information: Differences in Demographics, Health Beliefs, and Health-Information Orientation" @default.
- W2005070837 cites W2001037206 @default.
- W2005070837 cites W2007703970 @default.
- W2005070837 cites W2045833544 @default.
- W2005070837 cites W2045906218 @default.
- W2005070837 cites W2061474427 @default.
- W2005070837 cites W2062665604 @default.
- W2005070837 cites W2079175517 @default.
- W2005070837 cites W2080175848 @default.
- W2005070837 cites W2080271974 @default.
- W2005070837 cites W2092796892 @default.
- W2005070837 cites W2105754154 @default.
- W2005070837 cites W2116845265 @default.
- W2005070837 cites W2153199695 @default.
- W2005070837 cites W2396291300 @default.
- W2005070837 cites W4249410667 @default.
- W2005070837 doi "https://doi.org/10.2196/jmir.5.3.e21" @default.
- W2005070837 hasPubMedCentralId "https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/1550562" @default.
- W2005070837 hasPubMedId "https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/14517112" @default.
- W2005070837 hasPublicationYear "2003" @default.
- W2005070837 type Work @default.
- W2005070837 sameAs 2005070837 @default.
- W2005070837 citedByCount "189" @default.
- W2005070837 countsByYear W20050708372012 @default.
- W2005070837 countsByYear W20050708372013 @default.
- W2005070837 countsByYear W20050708372014 @default.
- W2005070837 countsByYear W20050708372015 @default.
- W2005070837 countsByYear W20050708372016 @default.
- W2005070837 countsByYear W20050708372017 @default.
- W2005070837 countsByYear W20050708372018 @default.
- W2005070837 countsByYear W20050708372019 @default.
- W2005070837 countsByYear W20050708372020 @default.
- W2005070837 countsByYear W20050708372021 @default.
- W2005070837 countsByYear W20050708372022 @default.
- W2005070837 countsByYear W20050708372023 @default.
- W2005070837 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W2005070837 hasAuthorship W2005070837A5035963484 @default.
- W2005070837 hasBestOaLocation W20050708371 @default.
- W2005070837 hasConcept C105795698 @default.
- W2005070837 hasConcept C108827166 @default.
- W2005070837 hasConcept C110875604 @default.
- W2005070837 hasConcept C136764020 @default.
- W2005070837 hasConcept C15744967 @default.
- W2005070837 hasConcept C17744445 @default.
- W2005070837 hasConcept C199539241 @default.
- W2005070837 hasConcept C2776620684 @default.
- W2005070837 hasConcept C2778095710 @default.
- W2005070837 hasConcept C2778757428 @default.
- W2005070837 hasConcept C2779024087 @default.
- W2005070837 hasConcept C2780224610 @default.
- W2005070837 hasConcept C33923547 @default.
- W2005070837 hasConcept C41008148 @default.
- W2005070837 hasConceptScore W2005070837C105795698 @default.
- W2005070837 hasConceptScore W2005070837C108827166 @default.
- W2005070837 hasConceptScore W2005070837C110875604 @default.
- W2005070837 hasConceptScore W2005070837C136764020 @default.
- W2005070837 hasConceptScore W2005070837C15744967 @default.
- W2005070837 hasConceptScore W2005070837C17744445 @default.
- W2005070837 hasConceptScore W2005070837C199539241 @default.
- W2005070837 hasConceptScore W2005070837C2776620684 @default.
- W2005070837 hasConceptScore W2005070837C2778095710 @default.
- W2005070837 hasConceptScore W2005070837C2778757428 @default.
- W2005070837 hasConceptScore W2005070837C2779024087 @default.
- W2005070837 hasConceptScore W2005070837C2780224610 @default.
- W2005070837 hasConceptScore W2005070837C33923547 @default.
- W2005070837 hasConceptScore W2005070837C41008148 @default.
- W2005070837 hasIssue "3" @default.
- W2005070837 hasLocation W20050708371 @default.
- W2005070837 hasLocation W20050708372 @default.
- W2005070837 hasLocation W20050708373 @default.
- W2005070837 hasLocation W20050708374 @default.
- W2005070837 hasOpenAccess W2005070837 @default.
- W2005070837 hasPrimaryLocation W20050708371 @default.
- W2005070837 hasRelatedWork W165418903 @default.
- W2005070837 hasRelatedWork W2006620598 @default.
- W2005070837 hasRelatedWork W2049469919 @default.
- W2005070837 hasRelatedWork W2130377901 @default.
- W2005070837 hasRelatedWork W2473009117 @default.
- W2005070837 hasRelatedWork W2910397568 @default.
- W2005070837 hasRelatedWork W3021721492 @default.
- W2005070837 hasRelatedWork W3023109464 @default.
- W2005070837 hasRelatedWork W3046788595 @default.
- W2005070837 hasRelatedWork W766060077 @default.
- W2005070837 hasVolume "5" @default.
- W2005070837 isParatext "false" @default.
- W2005070837 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W2005070837 magId "2005070837" @default.
- W2005070837 workType "article" @default.