European citizens' use of E-health services : a study of seven countries
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/1257DOI
doi:10.1186/1471-2458-7-53Dato
2007-04-10Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Wynn, Rolf; Andreassen, Hege K.; Bujnowska-Fedak, Maria M.; Chronaki, Catherine E.; Dumitru, Roxana C.; Pudule, Iveta; Santana, Silvina; Voss, HenningSammendrag
Background: European citizens are increasingly being offered Internet health services. This study
investigated patterns of health-related Internet use, its consequences, and citizens' expectations
about their doctors' provision of e-health services.
Methods: Representative samples were obtained from the general populations in Norway,
Denmark, Germany, Greece, Poland, Portugal and Latvia. The total sample consisted of 7934
respondents. Interviews were conducted by telephone.
Results: 44 % of the total sample, 71 % of the Internet users, had used the Internet for health
purposes. Factors that positively affected the use of Internet for health purposes were youth,
higher education, white-collar or no paid job, visits to the GP during the past year, long-term illness
or disabilities, and a subjective assessment of one's own health as good. Women were the most
active health users among those who were online. One in four of the respondents used the Internet
to prepare for or follow up doctors' appointments. Feeling reassured after using the Internet for
health purposes was twice as common as experiencing anxieties. When choosing a new doctor,
more than a third of the sample rated the provision of e-health services as important.
Conclusion: The users of Internet health services differ from the general population when it
comes to health and demographic variables. The most common way to use the Internet in health
matters is to read information, second comes using the net to decide whether to see a doctor and
to prepare for and follow up on doctors' appointments. Hence, health-related use of the Internet
does affect patients' use of other health services, but it would appear to supplement rather than to
replace other health services.
Forlag
BioMed CentralSitering
BMC Public Health 7(2007) article no 53Metadata
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