TY - JOUR AU - Wang, Yang AU - Wu, Hong AU - Lei, Xueqin AU - Shen, Jingxuan AU - Feng, Zhanchun PY - 2020 DA - 2020/12/11 TI - The Influence of Doctors’ Online Reputation on the Sharing of Outpatient Experiences: Empirical Study JO - J Med Internet Res SP - e16691 VL - 22 IS - 12 KW - online health communities KW - individual reputation KW - doctor reputation KW - patient feedback KW - organizational reputation KW - disease severity AB - Background: The internet enables consumers to evaluate products before purchase based on feedback submitted by like-minded individuals. Displaying reviews allows customers to assess comparable experiences and encourages trust, increased sales, and brand positivity. Customers use reviews to inform decision making, whereas organizations use reviews to predict future sales. Prior studies have focused on manufactured products, with little attention being paid to health care services. In particular, whether patients prefer to use websites to discuss doctors’ reputation has so far remained unanswered. Objective: This study aims to investigate how patient propensity to post treatment experiences changes based on doctors’ online reputation (medical quality and service attitude) in delivering outpatient care services. Further, this study examines the moderating effects of hospitals’ (organizational) online reputation and disease severity. Methods: Fractional logistic regression was conducted on data collected from 7183 active doctors in a Chinese online health community to obtain empirical results. Results: Our findings show that patients prefer to share treatment experiences for doctors who have a higher medical quality and service attitude (βservice attitude=.233; P<.001 and βmedical quality=.052; P<.001) and who work in hospitals with a higher online reputation (β=.001; P<.001). Patients are more likely to share experiences of doctors who treat less severe diseases, as opposed to those treating severe diseases (β=−.004; P=.009). In addition, hospitals’ online reputation positively (negatively) moderates the relationship between medical quality (service attitude) and patient propensity to post treatment experiences, whereas the moderating effects of disease severity on doctors’ online reputation are negative. Conclusions: Our research contributes to both theory and practice by extending the current understanding of the impact of individual reputation on consumer behavior. We investigate the moderating effects of organizational reputation and consumer characteristics in online health communities. SN - 1438-8871 UR - http://www.jmir.org/2020/12/e16691/ UR - https://doi.org/10.2196/16691 UR - http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33306028 DO - 10.2196/16691 ID - info:doi/10.2196/16691 ER -