6 results on '"Seçkin, Gül"'
Search Results
2. Cyber patients surfing the medical web: Computer-mediated medical knowledge and perceived benefits
- Author
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Seçkin, Gül
- Subjects
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MEDICAL telematics , *INTERNET in medicine , *INFORMATION & communication technologies , *INFORMATION sharing , *HEALTH self-care , *REGRESSION analysis - Abstract
Abstract: Information and communication technologies have introduced new and impressive tools for information sharing and building computer-mediated knowledge repositories in a global context. Clinicians and researchers pay particular attention to technology as a promising tool to empower patients through self-health care management skills and to improve health care communication with providers. This represents a significant step in modern medicine of computer-integrated patient self-health care. This paper aims to examine perceived informational and decisional benefits of computer-mediated health and medical information, more specifically of cancer web-sites, and presents the results of two separate statistical models of perceived benefits. Multivariate hierarchical regression analyses showed that the frequency and time spent visiting medical web-sites are significant predictors of perceived benefits of computer-mediated knowledge. The results also indicated that computer-mediated medical information empowers health consumers to make informed decisions for their health care. The discussion section of the paper contextualizes the findings within the current sociomedical trends of self-health care and partnership with health providers. It is important to understand the perceived benefits of using computer-mediated medical knowledge, so that information and communication technologies can be targeted to educate patients to make informed decisions and to develop patient self-health-care management competencies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2010
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3. Digital Diversity or Digital Divide: An Exploratory Research on Age, Gender, Race and Income Characteristics of Online Health Information Users.
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Seçkin, Gül
- Subjects
MODERN society ,DIGITAL technology ,DIGITAL divide ,INFORMATION society ,TECHNOLOGICAL innovations ,INTERNET ,HEALTH websites - Abstract
As a characteristic of modern society, the Internet has led to an information revolution and has become an essential information resource. Most patients use the Internet to gather information about their health problems, treatment options and even to check the credentials of their treating physicians. This paper presents results of a cross-sectional study (n=375) with online cancer patients. Results demonstrated that using the Internet health web sites is a characteristic of individuals with high levels of education and income. Most of the respondents were Caucasian women. Results are indicative of a larger social pattern that gender based digital divide in regards to utilization of health information web sites has narrowed down. However, race, education, and income based digital divide still characterized the sample. Finally, the data showed that older adults still lag behind the younger cohorts of Internet health web site users. This paper concludes with a discussion of some potential strategies that can be taken to reduce the digital divide and increase digital diversity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
4. Expansion of Parson's sick role into cyberspace: Patient information consumerism and subjective health in a representative sample of U.S. internet users.
- Author
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Seçkin, Gül
- Subjects
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INTERNET , *COMMUNICATION , *HEALTH status indicators , *MEDICAL informatics , *MEDICINE information services , *MULTIVARIATE analysis , *HEALTH outcome assessment , *PATIENT satisfaction , *PROBABILITY theory , *RISK assessment , *HEALTH self-care , *SELF-evaluation , *SEX distribution , *PSYCHOLOGY of the sick , *SURVEYS , *MULTIPLE regression analysis , *HEALTH information services - Abstract
The self-help culture, in the context of the U.S. medical system, demands proactive patient behavior as more responsibility for good health falls on the patient. The presence of health/medical information online alters the dynamics of medical encounters and transforms patients into reflexive consumers or consumer-patients who are engaged in personal health management. This paper examined whether using health information obtained from the Internet to manage personal health care (referred as e-health information consumerism) is associated with subjectively reported negative health outcomes in a representative sample of Internet users in the U.S. These outcomes are conceptualized as experiencing (a) adverse affect (feeling worried and anxious) and (b) health problem due to using Internet information. An online survey (n = 710) was conducted with study participants who were recruited from the largest online probability U.S. research panel developed by a non-profit academic research firm, Knowledge Networks. Analyses included multivariate regressions that included the statistical interactions between e-health information consumerism and the communicational and interactional aspects of medical encounters. Parallel models were tested in the gender-stratified subsamples. Results indicate that robust associations exist between e-health information consumerism and patient-reported health outcomes. Respondents who indicated greater satisfaction with medical communication reported lower averages on experiencing worry and a health problem due to e-health information consumerism. While e-health information consumerism is significantly associated with experiencing a self-reported health problem in both men and women, the association with adverse affect is significant only among women. The moderating role of patient satisfaction with medical communication is stronger among women. Interestingly, the moderating role of patient satisfaction with a medical interaction is stronger among respondents who reported higher averages on experiencing a health problem due to e-health information consumerism. e-Health information consumerism can translate into health benefits if the Internet information is deployed to promote a satisfactory medical partnership. • The growth of online health information challenges the parameters of the sick role. • Information pluralism encourages a consumerist orientation towards health. • The Internet may pose a health risk for physical and emotional well-being. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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5. Digital Pathways to Positive Health Perceptions: Does Age Moderate the Relationship Between Medical Satisfaction and Positive Health Perceptions Among Middle-Aged and Older Internet Users?
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Seçkin, Gül, Hughes, Susan, Yeatts, Dale, and Degreve, Thomas
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PATIENT satisfaction ,HEALTH of older people ,HEALTH literacy - Abstract
Objectives We explored the influence of e-trust, e-health literacy, e-health information seeking, and e-health information consumerism on medical satisfaction and positive health perceptions. Methods Our sample consisted of 499 randomly selected panel members aged 40–93. We employed hierarchical ordinary least squares (OLS) regression analyses and structural equation modeling (SEM). We examined the moderating role of age on the relationship between medical satisfaction and positive health perceptions. Results A significant interaction was found between age and medical satisfaction in predicting positive health perceptions in the OLS regression models. Medical satisfaction has a stronger association with self-care, health-related quality of life, and health status in the older adult sample as compared with the middle-aged sample. SEM analyses revealed that e-health information seeking has an indirect effect on both medical satisfaction and positive health perceptions through its significant direct effect on e-health information consumerism. Both e-trust and e-health consumerism were significant predictors. The e-health literacy and e-trust measures were significant predictors of the positive health perception index in the OLS regression models. Discussion The results contribute to our understanding of the potential benefits information technologies have for the health and well-being of computer-connected aging adults. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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6. Being an Informed Consumer of Health Information and Assessment of Electronic Health Literacy in a National Sample of Internet Users: Validity and Reliability of the e-HLS Instrument.
- Author
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Seçkin, Gül, Yeatts, Dale, Hughes, Susan, Hudson, Cassie, and Bell, Valarie
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HEALTH literacy ,INTERNET in medicine ,HEALTH behavior ,PSYCHOMETRICS ,CELL phones ,INTERNET ,MEDICAL informatics ,RESEARCH evaluation ,TELEMEDICINE ,INFORMATION literacy ,MULTIDIMENSIONAL Health Locus of Control scales - Abstract
Background: The Internet, with its capacity to provide information that transcends time and space barriers, continues to transform how people find and apply information to their own lives. With the current explosion in electronic sources of health information, including thousands of websites and hundreds of mobile phone health apps, electronic health literacy is gaining an increasing prominence in health and medical research. An important dimension of electronic health literacy is the ability to appraise the quality of information that will facilitate everyday health care decisions. Health information seekers explore their care options by gathering information from health websites, blogs, Web-based forums, social networking websites, and advertisements, despite the fact that information quality on the Internet varies greatly. Nonetheless, research has lagged behind in establishing multidimensional instruments, in part due to the evolving construct of health literacy itself.Objective: The purpose of this study was to examine psychometric properties of a new electronic health literacy (ehealth literacy) measure in a national sample of Internet users with specific attention to older users. Our paper is motivated by the fact that ehealth literacy is an underinvestigated area of inquiry.Methods: Our sample was drawn from a panel of more than 55,000 participants maintained by Knowledge Networks, the largest national probability-based research panel for Web-based surveys. We examined the factor structure of a 19-item electronic Health Literacy Scale (e-HLS) through exploratory factor analysis (EFA) and confirmatory factor analysis, internal consistency reliability, and construct validity on sample of adults (n=710) and a subsample of older adults (n=194). The AMOS graphics program 21.0 was used to construct a measurement model, linking latent factors obtained from EFA with 19 indicators to determine whether this factor structure achieved a good fit with our entire sample and the subsample (age ≥ 60 years). Linear regression analyses were performed in separate models to examine: (1) the construct validity of the e-HLS and (2) its association with respondents' demographic characteristics and health variables.Results: The EFA produced a 3-factor solution: communication (2 items), trust (4 items), and action (13 items). The 3-factor structure of the e-HLS was found to be invariant for the subsample. Fit indices obtained were as follows: full sample: χ(2) (710)=698.547, df=131, P<.001, comparative fit index (CFI)=0.94, normed fit index (NFI)=0.92, root mean squared error of approximation (RMSEA)=0.08; and for the older subsample (age ≥ 60 years): χ(2) (194)=275.744, df=131, P<.001, CFI=0.95, NFI=0.90, RMSEA=0.08.Conclusions: The analyses supported the e-HLS validity and internal reliability for the full sample and subsample. The overwhelming majority of our respondents reported a great deal of confidence in their ability to appraise the quality of information obtained from the Internet, yet less than half reported performing quality checks contained on the e-HLS. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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