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What Encourages Patients to Recommend Their Doctor After an Online Medical Consultation? The Influence of Patient-Centered Communication, Trust, and Negative Health Information Seeking Experiences

Jinxu Li, Richard L. Street

2024Health Communication11 citationsDOI

Abstract

The doctor-patient relationship in China has become increasingly tense, with patients lacking trust in doctors. Meanwhile, online healthcare flourished, accelerated by the COVID-19 pandemic. This study utilized the direct and indirect pathway model of clinician-patient communication to health outcomes and online trust theory to examine the associations between online patient-centered communication (OPCC), benevolence and ability trust in doctors, negative online health information seeking experiences, and willingness to recommend doctors. The findings revealed that benevolence and ability trust mediated the relationship between OPCC and willingness to recommend doctors. Additionally, when participants had a high level of negative online health information seeking experiences, OPCC had a stronger effect on ability trust; meanwhile, the mediation effect of ability trust between the relationship of OPCC and willingness to recommend was stronger. This study also discussed theoretical and practical implications.

Topics & Concepts

MediationHealth communicationPsychologyHealth careInformation seeking behaviorModerated mediationCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Health informationInformation seekingSocial psychologyMedicineEconomicsLibrary sciencePolitical scienceCommunicationInfectious disease (medical specialty)PathologyDiseaseEconomic growthComputer scienceLawPatient-Provider Communication in HealthcarePatient Satisfaction in HealthcareAttachment and Relationship Dynamics