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Journal IssueDOI

A model for online consumer health information quality

TLDR
It was showed that consumers may lack the motivation or literacy skills to evaluate the information quality of health Web pages, which suggests the need to develop accessible automatic information quality evaluation tools and ontologies.
Abstract
This article describes a model for online consumer health information consisting of five quality criteria constructs. These constructs are grounded in empirical data from the perspectives of the three main sources in the communication process: health information providers, consumers, and intermediaries, such as Web directory creators and librarians, who assist consumers in finding healthcare information. The article also defines five constructs of Web page structural markers that could be used in information quality evaluation and maps these markers to the quality criteria. Findings from correlation analysis and multinomial logistic tests indicate that use of the structural markers depended significantly on the type of Web page and type of information provider. The findings suggest the need to define genre-specific templates for quality evaluation and the need to develop models for an automatic genre-based classification of health information Web pages. In addition, the study showed that consumers may lack the motivation or literacy skills to evaluate the information quality of health Web pages, which suggests the need to develop accessible automatic information quality evaluation tools and ontologies. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Low health literacy and evaluation of online health information: A systematic review of the literature

TL;DR: Current evidence indicates that low health literacy (and related skills) play a role in the evaluation of online health information, and future research in this field should specifically focus on health literacy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Untangling the antecedents of initial trust in Web-based health information: The roles of argument quality, source expertise, and user perceptions of information quality and risk

TL;DR: The results largely support the proposed model of initial trust formation in Web-based health information, explaining substantial variance in trust and highlighting the important but distinct roles that argument quality, source expertise, and user perceptions of information quality and risk play in determining an individual's decision to trust health information online.
Journal ArticleDOI

Towards an ontology for data quality in integrated chronic disease management: A realist review of the literature

TL;DR: This work advocates moving to ontology-based design of information systems to enable more reliable use of routine data to measure health mechanisms and impacts and identifies mechanisms to manage DQ in integrated CDM.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Impact of Search Engine Selection and Sorting Criteria on Vaccination Beliefs and Attitudes: Two Experiments Manipulating Google Output

TL;DR: The existence of dangerous health literacy in connection with searching and using health information on the Internet is verified by exploring the effect of 2 manipulated search engines that yielded either pro or con vaccination sites only.
Journal ArticleDOI

Online information quality and consumer satisfaction

TL;DR: A moderator analysis involving website type, sample characteristics, and the IQ categories used in articles revealed that whereas website type and IQ categories moderate the relationship between perceived online IQ and consumer satisfaction, sample details do not.
References
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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Online Trust Production: Interactions among Trust Building Mechanisms

TL;DR: Regression results show that all three trust building mechanisms have significant positive effects on trust in the online vendor, which has both theoretical and practical implications.
Journal Article

You can negotiate with health plans

Robert Lowes
- 01 Nov 2008 - 
TL;DR: Bargaining with powerful insurers may be harder than ever, but that doesn't mean you should accept their fees hands down.
Journal Article

You can negotiate with health plans

Robert Lowes
- 04 Jan 2008 - 
TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that bargaining with powerful insurers may be harder than ever, but that doesn't mean you should accept their fees hands down, and that bargaining is not always easy.
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