Understanding Users’ Perception on the Trustworthiness of Online
Health Information
Shijuan Li, Beidi Yu, Jiexi Liu and Biting Huang
Department of Information Management, Peking University, Beijing, China
Keywords: Information Credibility, Information Trustworthiness, Information Literacy, Youth, Health Information
Seeking.
Abstract: The evaluation of online health information, i.e. its reliability, credibility, trustworthiness, etc., plays a
significant role in the users’ judging and health behaviour change process. Related works haven’t come to a
consensus on the framework of trust formation process. Nor much attention has been paid to one of the most
active groups of online information users, the youth. This study, from the young people’s perspective,
examines the perception and judgment on the trustworthiness towards online health information. To test the
design and reveal deficiencies of the study and procedure before time and resources are expended on large-
scale studies, a pilot study was designed and conducted. Then semi-structured interviews were employed
involving students from two groups: university freshman and the seniors respectively. The preliminary
results cover: the exploration of their health information seeking process, factor analysis towards
trustworthiness of online health information, the perceptions on HON measures and related health
information literacy.
1 INTRODUCTION
The assessment of online health information, i.e. its
reliability, credibility, trustworthiness, etc.,
influences greatly the users’ judging and health
behavior change process. Related works haven’t
come to a consensus on the framework of trust
formation process. It has been revealed that
credibility is a key impact factor of trust formation;
influencing users’ trust judgement and health
behaviour change eventually (Everard and Galletta
,
2005, Rowley et al., 2015). Other work indicated
that trust and credibility are two concepts overlapped,
since they share same sub-domains, i.e. brand,
content, usefulness, style, while considering
constructing an assessment framework (Fogg et al.,
2003, Rowley et al., 2015).
Nor much attention has been paid to one of the
most active groups of online information users, the
youth. Young people have been recognized as one of
the most active groups of the Internet users in China
(China Internet Network Information Center, 2016).
According to China Internet Network Information
Center (CNNIC), there were approximately 688
million Internet users in China by 2015, among
which 36.4% (around 224 million) were young
people (aged between 10 to 24). Though probably
they are supposed to have comprehensive surfing
skills and have extensive Internet experience, they
still have difficulty in evaluating the quality of
online information, especially health information
(Gray et al., 2005, Dobransky and Hargittai, 2012).
This study, from the young people’s perspective,
particularly examines the perception and judgment
towards trustworthiness of online health information,
which then will help to explore their health
information behaviour. The core questions are
designed include: If the youth are capable of judging
the quality of online health information? What are
their processes of trust formation towards online
health information? What factors influence
positively or negatively their acceptance and use of
online health information? The rest of the paper is
organized as follows: explanations of methods and
materials utilized during data collection and data
analysis process; preliminary analysis results from
the qualitative study, consisting of a pilot study and
semi-structured interviews; end with a discussion.
Li S., Yu B., Liu J. and Huang B.
Understanding Usersâ
˘
A
´
Z Perception on the Trustworthiness of Online Health Information.
DOI: 10.5220/0006234404130417
In Proceedings of the 10th International Joint Conference on Biomedical Engineering Systems and Technologies (BIOSTEC 2017), pages 413-417
ISBN: 978-989-758-213-4
Copyright
c
2017 by SCITEPRESS – Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
413
2 METHODS AND MATERIALS
The methods of the ongoing work are designed
including of a pilot study and semi-structured
interviews. Young people’s perception and judgment
towards the trustworthiness of online health
information are investigated utilizing searching
experiment and follow-up interviews. Volunteered
participants, aged between 18 to 24, were employed
in the Peking University (China) to take part in the
investigation. The participants were asked to firstly
attend 30 minutes long session to search for
information within a given health field. Each
participant should provide concurrent protocols as
they search the Internet for health information.
Meanwhile, a numerical scale, from one to ten, will
be provided to them to score the trustworthiness of
the searching results. Then a brief interview is
followed to explore the rational on how they allocate
scores for the trustworthiness of each result (Yu,
2016).
2.1 Related Measures
Evaluation tools are available to assess online health
information, and previous studies have used generic
tools, i.e., HON code, to examine the quality of web-
based healthcare information (Harland, 2007; Hsu
W-C, 2008; Kim, 1999). The Health On the Net
Foundation (HON) (www.healthonnet.org) promotes
and guides the deployment of useful and reliable
online health information, and its appropriate and
efficient use. The purpose of HON code is to protect
all from incorrect, indeed misleading medical and
health information. With this intention, HON
accredits web sites according to eight ethical
principles: 1) from which authority the information
is coming from; 2) what is the purpose of the site; 3)
the confidentiality policy; 4) the origin of the
sources used; 5) the justification about benefits and
performance of a specific treatment; 6) the
transparency of the authorship; 7) the transparency
of sponsorship as well as honesty in advertising; 8)
editorial policies. The user’s perceptions on those
selected measures are investigated in this study as
well.
2.2 Data Collection
The qualitative data are collected from both the pilot
study and interviews. A pilot study was conducted to
reveal deficiencies in the design of the study and
procedure before time and resources are expended
on large-scale studies. The participant approached
was a senior university student who was interviewed
about basic information about online health
information search and trustworthiness judgement.
Questions that were not answered as expected were
re-worded or re-scaled; time that taken to complete
the session was recorded to decide whether it is
reasonable; ambiguities in questions were identified
and clarified.
Then semi-structured interviews were conducted
involving students from two groups: university
freshman and the seniors respectively. The recorded
interviews were transcribed by one the research team
and then crosschecked by another member. The
preliminary results were analysed utilizing content-
based analysis that will be discussed in the next
section in greater details.
2.3 Data Analysis
The data collected from both the pilot study and the
interviews were recorded and transcribed with
permission from the participants for further analysis.
One concern is that of contamination of data.
This may arise from either where data from the pilot
study are included in the main results or where pilot
participants are included in the main study, but new
data are collected from these people (van Teijlingen
and Hundley, 2001). It is believed that
contamination is less of a concern in qualitative
research, where researchers often use some or all of
their pilot data as part of the main study. Some have
therefore argued that in qualitative approaches
separate pilot studies are not necessary (Holloway,
1997). Frankland and Bloor (Frankland and Bloor,
1999) indicated that piloting provides the qualitative
researcher with a “clear definition of the focus of the
study” which in turn helps the researcher to
concentrate data collection on a narrow spectrum of
projected analytical topics. Therefore, data from the
pilot study was included in the overall analysis.
The interpretation and analysis of the data
employed content-based thematic analysis that
involved classifying and coding the content into
themes. An explanation of the codebook used is as
shown in Table 1, including the code, theme and
their corresponding explanations. The main themes
formed from the data include: the health information
seeking process, perception on HON measures,
health information literacy, factor analysis on
trustworthiness etc.
HEALTHINF 2017 - 10th International Conference on Health Informatics
414
Table 1: Codebook.
Code Theme Ex
p
lanation
IS
Credible
information
source
Health websites, hospital
websites, question and answer
communit
y
IP
Credible
information
p
rovide
r
Large public hospitals, doctors
from famous hospitals
CI
Credible
information
Disease symptoms, appointment
information, hospital and
department ranks, misunderstands
of info
r
mation
NI
Not credible
information
Recommended medicine,
recommended thera
py
NF
Not credible
facto
r
Advertisement
AA
Active
acquisition
Hospitals and departments
PA
Passive
ac
q
uisition
Pushing articles
TF
Information
trust formation
Information from authority
consistentl
3 PRELIMINARY RESULTS
Basing on both related theories and the previous
findings, the preliminary results from the qualitative
data are categorized into the following themes:
Exploration of their health information seeking
process;
Their perception on HON measures and related
health information literacy;
Factor analysis towards trustworthiness of
online health information.
3.1 Health Information Seeking
Process
As shown in Figure 1, the participant actively seeks
for health information when a health related issue
occurred, or they passively received pushed
information from well-known information sources,
such as top websites or official organizations. The
take-for-granted trust on experts and large public
hospitals arguably affects young people’s
assessment of credibility of online health
information, and excludes other information sources
such as private sectors.
They tend to believe the health information
immediately as long as they are from large hospitals
with good reputation (i.e. Three grade hospital in
China), or the online health information were
provided by the physicians who have been working
in those large hospitals.
“The most credible website is hospital website.”
“Large hospitals hired these doctors have
verified their professionalism.”
“That information is provided by professional
doctors and it can’t impact my health.”
Figure 1: Health information seeking process.
3.2 Perceptions on HON Measures
Not very surprisingly, nearly all of the participants
have not heard of the HON code measures
previously due to their health information literacy
limitations. On the other hand, the HON code has
been well established in the western world prior its
translation into Chinese languages. Regarding to the
detailed eight measures that forming the HON’s
ethical principles; the authority, the purpose,
confidentiality and the frequency of the occurrence
of advertisement could have affected their
judgement and perception towards the online health
information’s credibility. Moreover, senior students
showed capability of more sophisticated information
literacy and willingness to explore complicated
measures for online health information.
“If I suffer from health problems which I can’t
solve with common sense, I must go to the hospital. I
don’t trust commercial recommendations.”
“Heavy advertisements are for profit only. They
may exaggerate the issues.”
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Z Perception on the Trustworthiness of Online Health Information
415
3.3 Factor Analysis on Trustworthiness
Young people pay more attention to well-known
healthcare providers. They tend to neglect the
content or design of health information. Therefore,
their take-for-granted trust on the experts affects the
youth’s choices greatly.
Figure 2 and Figure 3 summarized the
subdomains of two important factors, “trust” and
“credibility”, from related studies.
“Trust/trustworthiness” and “credibility” have
been identified as two factors that affect each other,
which therefore confused the formation of
trustworthiness towards online health information
and the define of those two concepts. Nevertheless,
other factors, such as brand, content, verification,
style, design look, authority, expertise, real-world
feel, are identified as factors for the youth to decide
the trustworthiness towards online health
information.
Figure 2: Subdomains of “Trust”.
Figure 3: Subdomains of “credibility”.
“I read these articles carefully because they are
filtered by editors who should be responsible.”
“I use Internet to search what the disease is and
which hospital and department I should go to.
“When I browse the information I get from
search engine, all of them are consistent.”
4 DISCUSSION
The preliminary findings from our work is
summarized as following:
The participants paid more attention to the
trustworthy information providers, i.e. leading
hospitals, doctors and web editors, which
contribute to the credibility of health
information.
The take-for-granted trust on experts and large
public hospitals arguably affects young
people’s assessment of credibility of online
health information, and excludes other
information sources such as private sectors.
The lack of provision of health information
from well-known organizations and
consumers’ deficiency in health information
literacy restricts the health information
seeking and utilizing behaviour.
Sillence et al. (2007) noted that the design and
content of information were major impact factors
within the dimension that users utilized to assess the
credibility of online health information. The reason
behind this difference between previous study and
ours will be investigated in future large-scale studies.
In addition, the result of pilot study indicated that
when conducting searching experiment, the task
should be set about a common symptom which
young people are more likely to suffer from. The
active acquisition and passive acquisition should
also be taken into consideration to augment the
research methodologies.
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