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What Predicts Patients’ Willingness to Undergo Online Treatment and Pay for Online Treatment? Results from a Web-Based Survey to Investigate the Changing Patient-Physician Relationship

What Predicts Patients’ Willingness to Undergo Online Treatment and Pay for Online Treatment? Results from a Web-Based Survey to Investigate the Changing Patient-Physician Relationship

More detailed analyses of other aspects of the online patient-physician relationship (eg, online correspondence, appointments) may allow additional insights into possible gender differences (eg, see Bidmon and Terlutter [66]). Trust in the GP also failed to be a significant predictor. This may be because patients do not perceive any differences in having to communicate with their GP face-to-face or online as long as they can contact their own GP, in whom they place their trust.

Johanna Roettl, Sonja Bidmon, Ralf Terlutter

J Med Internet Res 2016;18(2):e32

What Explains Usage of Mobile Physician-Rating Apps? Results From a Web-Based Questionnaire

What Explains Usage of Mobile Physician-Rating Apps? Results From a Web-Based Questionnaire

A study conducted by Terlutter et al in 2012 [32] found that younger, male, more highly educated people and those people with a chronic disease were more inclined to use PRWs. Users also differed psychographically from nonusers of PRWs because they revealed more positive feelings about the Internet and other Web-based applications in general and had a higher digital literacy rate than nonusers.

Sonja Bidmon, Ralf Terlutter, Johanna Röttl

J Med Internet Res 2014;16(6):e148