Surrogate health information seeking in Europe: Influence of source type and social network variables
Reifegerste D, Bachl M, Baumann E (2017)
International Journal of Medical Informatics 103: 7-14.
Zeitschriftenaufsatz
| Veröffentlicht | Englisch
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Autor*in
Reifegerste, DoreenUniBi;
Bachl, Marko;
Baumann, EvaUniBi
Abstract / Bemerkung
Objectives
Health information seeking on behalf of others is an important form of social support by which laypeople provide important sources of information for patients. Based on social network theory, we analyze whether this phenomenon also occurs in offline sources. We also seek to learn more about the type of relationships between information seekers and patients, as research to date indicates that surrogate seeking mostly occurs in close relationships between the seeker and the patient.
Methods
Using a large-scale representative survey from the 28 member states of the European Union (N = 26,566), our data comprise all respondents who reported seeking health information online or offline (n = 18,750; 70.6%).
Results
Within the past year, 61.0% of the online health information seekers and 61.1% of the offline health information seekers had searched on behalf of someone else. Independent of the information channel, surrogate seekers primarily searched for health information for family members (online: 89.8%; offline: 92.8%); they were significantly less likely to search for information on behalf of someone with whom they had weaker ties, such as colleagues (online: 25.1%; offline: 24.4%). In a multilevel generalized linear model, living together with someone was by far the most relevant determinant for surrogate seeking, with differences between countries or Internet activity being less important.
Conclusion
These results support the assumptions of social network theory. Implications are discussed, especially with regard to the provision of adequate health information.
Erscheinungsjahr
2017
Zeitschriftentitel
International Journal of Medical Informatics
Band
103
Seite(n)
7-14
ISSN
13865056
Page URI
https://pub.uni-bielefeld.de/record/2980402
Zitieren
Reifegerste D, Bachl M, Baumann E. Surrogate health information seeking in Europe: Influence of source type and social network variables. International Journal of Medical Informatics. 2017;103:7-14.
Reifegerste, D., Bachl, M., & Baumann, E. (2017). Surrogate health information seeking in Europe: Influence of source type and social network variables. International Journal of Medical Informatics, 103, 7-14. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijmedinf.2017.04.006
Reifegerste, Doreen, Bachl, Marko, and Baumann, Eva. 2017. “Surrogate health information seeking in Europe: Influence of source type and social network variables”. International Journal of Medical Informatics 103: 7-14.
Reifegerste, D., Bachl, M., and Baumann, E. (2017). Surrogate health information seeking in Europe: Influence of source type and social network variables. International Journal of Medical Informatics 103, 7-14.
Reifegerste, D., Bachl, M., & Baumann, E., 2017. Surrogate health information seeking in Europe: Influence of source type and social network variables. International Journal of Medical Informatics, 103, p 7-14.
D. Reifegerste, M. Bachl, and E. Baumann, “Surrogate health information seeking in Europe: Influence of source type and social network variables”, International Journal of Medical Informatics, vol. 103, 2017, pp. 7-14.
Reifegerste, D., Bachl, M., Baumann, E.: Surrogate health information seeking in Europe: Influence of source type and social network variables. International Journal of Medical Informatics. 103, 7-14 (2017).
Reifegerste, Doreen, Bachl, Marko, and Baumann, Eva. “Surrogate health information seeking in Europe: Influence of source type and social network variables”. International Journal of Medical Informatics 103 (2017): 7-14.