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Do the certainty tone and seniority of physicians matter in patients' information adoption in online health communities?

Jiahua Jin (School of Economics and Management, University of Science and Technology Beijing, Beijing, China)
Qin Chen (University of Science and Technology Beijing, Beijing, China)
Xiangbin Yan (School of Economics and Management, University of Science and Technology Beijing, Beijing, China)

Information Technology & People

ISSN: 0959-3845

Article publication date: 30 October 2023

261

Abstract

Purpose

Given the popularity of online health communities (OHCs) and medical question-and-answer (Q&A) services, it is increasingly important to understand what constitutes useful answers and user-adopted standards in healthcare domain. However, few studies provide insights into how health information characteristics, provider characteristics and recipient characteristics jointly influence user information adoption decisions. To fill this research gap, this study examines the combined effects of physicians' certainty tone as information characteristics, seniority as provider characteristics and disease severity as recipient characteristics on patients' health information adoption.

Design/methodology/approach

Drawing on dual-process theory and information adoption model, an extended information adoption model is established in this study to examine the effect of attitude certainty on patients' health information adoption, and the moderating effects of online seniority and offline seniority, as well as patient motivation level—disease severity. Utilizing logit regression models, the authors empirically tested the hypotheses based on 4,224 Q&A records from a popular Chinese OHC.

Findings

The results show that (1) attitude certainty has a significant positive impact on patients' health information adoption, (2) the relationship between attitude certainty and information adoption is negatively moderated by physicians' online seniority, but is positively moderated by offline seniority; (3) there is a negative three-way interaction effect of attitude certainty, online seniority and disease severity on patients' health information adoption.

Originality/value

This study extends the information adoption model to examine the two-way interaction between argument quality and source reliability, as well as the three-way interaction with user motivation level, especially for health information adoption in the healthcare field. These findings also provide direct practical applications for knowledge contributors and OHCs.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

This research is supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant No. 72371024, 72025101) and Ministry of education of Humanities and Social Science Project (Grant No. 23YJC630012).

Since acceptance of this article, the following author(s) have updated their affiliations: Qin Chen is at the School of Economics and Management, Northwest University, Xi'an, China.

Citation

Jin, J., Chen, Q. and Yan, X. (2023), "Do the certainty tone and seniority of physicians matter in patients' information adoption in online health communities?", Information Technology & People, Vol. ahead-of-print No. ahead-of-print. https://doi.org/10.1108/ITP-01-2022-0034

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023, Emerald Publishing Limited

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