Dutta-Bergman Mohan
Department of Communication, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN 47906, USA.
J Med Internet Res. 2003 Jul-Sep;5(3):e21. doi: 10.2196/jmir.5.3.e21. Epub 2003 Sep 25.
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.
近期在线健康信息的激增以及消费者对这类信息的使用引发了专家对万维网上健康信息可信度的猜测和建议。尽管人们对在线健康信息来源的担忧日益增加,但现有研究表明,在消费者对互联网上不同健康信息来源可信度的评估领域存在空白。
本研究考察消费者对万维网上健康信息来源的评估,比较最信任特定信息来源的个体与不信任该特定健康信息来源的个体在人口统计学、态度和认知方面的差异。对多种来源进行比较。
自1995年起每年收集的波特诺维利健康风格数据库基于全国代表性的邮政调查结果。1999年,2636名受访者为健康风格数据库提供了可用数据。进行独立样本t检验以比较受访者在人口统计学、态度和认知变量方面的情况。
最受信任的在线健康信息来源包括私人医生、医科大学和联邦政府。结果表明,当比较信任特定在线来源的受访者与不信任该来源的受访者时,在人口统计学和健康导向变量方面存在显著差异,这表明需要采用细分方法进行研究和应用。信任当地医生的个体更年轻(t2634 = 4.02,P <.001)且健康信念更强(F1 = 5.65,P =.018);信任当地医院的个体受教育程度较低(t2634 = 3.83,P <.001),对健康信息关注度较低(F1 = 6.41,P =.011),且健康信念较弱(F1 = 5.56,P =.018)。对保险公司作为在线健康信息来源信任度较高的受访者受教育程度较低(t2634 = 1.90,P =.05)且对健康信息关注度较低(F1 = 4.30,P =.04)。对医科大学的信任与教育程度(t2634 = 11.83,P <.001)、收入(t2634 = 10.19,P <.001)和健康信息关注度(F1 = 10.32,P <.001)呈正相关。在联邦信息可信度方面也观察到类似结果,与不信任联邦来源的个体相比,更信任联邦来源的个体受教育程度更高(t2634 = 7.45,P <.001)且对健康信息关注度更高(F1 = 4.45,P =.04)。
结果表明,根据消费者信任的不同健康信息来源,消费者群体存在系统性差异。虽然某些来源,如当地医院和保险公司,可能是社会经济地位较低且对健康关注度较低的消费者群体的可靠健康信息来源,但医科大学和联邦网站等来源可能是社会经济地位较高且对健康关注度较高群体的可信赖来源。