The Changing Face of Trust in Health Websites

Elizabeth Sillence, Phoenix Mo, Pamela Briggs, Peter Harris

Research output: Contribution to conferencePaperpeer-review

Abstract

Over the last ten years the number of people using the Internet for health information and advice has grown rapidly. Many people trust the information and advice they find online although this trust may be misplaced. Indeed in a systematic meta-analysis of health website evaluations, 70% of studies concluded that quality is a problem on the Internet (Eysenbach et al., 2002). In the face of such variable quality, how do health consumers decide whether or not to trust the information and advice they find online? To address this question a review of Internet health use over the last ten years has been instigated with the intention of examining the attitudes and behaviour of online health consumers at 5 year intervals. This paper reports on the findings of that decade in e-health. In the year 2000 a large scale questionnaire was developed to assess online trust across a number of domains including health (Briggs et al., 2002). The data from the questionnaire was used to develop a staged model of trust. This model noted that design factors and visual appeal appeared to be strong predictors of early rejection and mistrust of a health website whilst content features such as source credibility and personalisation appeared to be more predictive of trust and selection. In 2005 the researchers sampled online health consumers again with two main objectives. Firstly, to generate an updated picture of the online health landscape, providing information on the kinds of websites people were accessing and the types of information they were seeking. Secondly, to build upon the original staged model of trust and so increase understanding of the process by which trust perceptions are translated into relevant behaviour. To these ends a revised trust questionnaire was developed reflecting the importance of both design and social identity issues. In addition questions specific to e-health (notably perceived threat, coping, and information checking and corroboration) were included. As predicted, these variables added to the ability of the model to predict variance in both trust and readiness to act upon the advice provided by the site. The results of the 2005 questionnaire data showed that women were still the predominant users of the Internet for health advice but that the sites they were seeking had changed from 2000. A key difference between the 2005 and 2000 data was the rise in use of ‘less regulated’ health sites (Sillence et al., 2006). These sites were typically run by individual ‘experts’ and marked the growing interest in Patient Experience (PEx) material online. This interest was reflected in the 2011 revised questionnaire which included items designed to measure the exposure to and importance of PEx material. The preliminary findings indicate that whilst PEx material predicts whether or not people like the site it negatively predicts their trust perceptions and has no bearing on their subsequent actions. Collectively the findings of this 10 year study provide valuable insights into the design of trustworthy health websites, our understanding of the process between trust and behavioural outcomes and the provision of PEx websites. This should be of interest to researchers, health practitioners, providers and policy makers.
Original languageEnglish
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2011
EventICS-OII 2011 Symposium: A Decade in Internet Time - University of Oxford, Oxford, UK
Duration: 1 Jan 2011 → …

Conference

ConferenceICS-OII 2011 Symposium: A Decade in Internet Time
Period1/01/11 → …

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