Department of Health Promotion, Maastricht University, Maastricht, The Netherlands.
Psychooncology. 2013 Jan;22(1):74-82. doi: 10.1002/pon.2056. Epub 2011 Sep 28.
Many cancer patients turn to the Internet to obtain information on their disease. This digital quest is often motivated by a perceived discrepancy between the information received from health professionals and patients' actual informational needs. This discrepancy may be reduced by supplementing standard patient education with reliable online information sources. This study investigates health professionals' opinions, cognitions, and behavior regarding referring cancer patients to Internet-based information.
Online and written questionnaires were distributed among Dutch oncology nurses and medical specialists, measuring perception of patients' informational needs, prompted and unprompted Internet referral, and socio-cognitive factors regarding referral behavior.
Health professionals (N = 130) positively appraised Internet use among cancer patients. Despite recognizing patients' needs for additional information (84%) and need for referral to reliable websites (67%), only 20% frequently referred patients to Internet-based information. Prompted Internet referral was higher (64%). Motives for nonreferral included unfamiliarity with websites and uncertainty about information quality. Intentions towards future referral were moderate to high. To translate intentions into referral, health professionals need reminder tools and information on reliability and content of websites. Cognitive determinants of referral behavior included professionals' attitude, self-efficacy, and intentions regarding referral.
Recognition of patients' information needs does not culminate in Internet referral among health professionals in cancer care. High intentions to change, however, indicate good prospects for future referral. This study yields valuable insights into behavioral determinants of health professionals' Internet referral behavior. Targeting determinants and barriers in future interventions will provide opportunities for optimization of educational practices.
许多癌症患者上网查询疾病信息。这种数字化搜索往往是由于患者认为从医护人员处获得的信息与其实际信息需求之间存在差异。通过为标准的患者教育补充可靠的在线信息资源,可以减少这种差异。本研究调查了医护人员对向癌症患者推荐基于互联网的信息的意见、认知和行为。
在线和书面问卷分发给荷兰肿瘤护士和医学专家,以测量对患者信息需求的感知、提示性和非提示性互联网推荐以及与推荐行为相关的社会认知因素。
健康专业人员(N=130)对癌症患者使用互联网持积极态度。尽管他们认识到患者对额外信息的需求(84%)和对可靠网站的推荐需求(67%),但只有 20%的人经常向患者推荐基于互联网的信息。提示性互联网推荐率更高(64%)。不推荐的原因包括不熟悉网站和对信息质量的不确定。对未来推荐的意向处于中等至较高水平。为了将意向转化为推荐,医护人员需要提醒工具以及有关网站可靠性和内容的信息。推荐行为的认知决定因素包括专业人员的态度、自我效能感和推荐意向。
在癌症护理中,医护人员认识到患者的信息需求,但并未最终导致互联网推荐。然而,较高的改变意向表明未来推荐的前景良好。本研究深入了解了健康专业人员互联网推荐行为的行为决定因素。针对未来干预措施中的决定因素和障碍,将为优化教育实践提供机会。