The Search for the Health and Social Security: Experiences from
Consumers Searching for Healthcare Services
Elorm Damalie
1a
, Reima Suomi
1b
, Pia Blomqvist
2
and Kaisa Ruotsalainen
3
1
Turku School of Economics, University of Turku, Rehtorinpellonkatu 3, 20500My, Turku, Finland
2
The Social Insurance Institution of Finland (Kela), Finland
3
Frantic, Finland
Keywords: Public Reporting, Information, eHealth, Literacy, Middlemen, Thematic, Systems.
Abstract: Backgroud and Objective: People use different information services to select their healthcare services. It is
important to collect and analyze user feedback from such sites to understand needs of the user and to develop
these services. As such information services are usually designed, implemented and maintained by third
parties, not the original service deliverers, we shortly discuss the concept of market middlemen. Furthermore,
as such services are not easy to use but require a certain level of experience and work from the users, we also
shortly review the discussion around eHealth literacy.
Study Design/Markets and Methods: Data was collected in year 2017 by the Contact Point for Cross-Border
Healthcare through a web-based survey from consumers searching for healthcare services. Some these
consumers are users of then Choosehealthcare.fi online service in Finnish Hoitopaikanvalinta.fi
website, that
now is renamed to EU-healthcare.fi and EU-terveydenhoito.fi in Finnish. Together feedback was collected from
93 respondents. We used thematic qualitative analysis to find themes that the respondents took up when
answering the survey. We used pre-analyzed material by Contact Point for Cross-Border Healthcare and Frantic.
Results: The results show that the needs of the users are very varied, and information on many different issues
are sought for. In general, the respondents found the amount of information to be overwhelming, and it was
difficult to find answers to specific questions. More structured information will give users an opportunity to
compare services between the different countries.
1 INTRODUCTION
The availability of information is more important now
than ever before. Consumer decision is now very
dependent on the amount of information available to
them. This is seen in amount of information
consumers are bombarded with daily by various
companies. In the healthcare sector, there is an
important need of availability of information to help
consumers make their healthcare choices (Wahlstedt
and Ekman, 2016). The internet is gradually
becoming the source of healthcare service-related
information (Parker and Plank, 2000, Lemire et al.,
2008). Searching for good reliable healthcare
information is gaining prominence among
consumers. This has led to the demand of platforms
that enables consumers to have access to the
a
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5695-3415
b
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2169-7997
information they search for in terms of healthcare.
There is the need of a platform that patients go to for
information about where to go for healthcare. The
norm is for consumers seeking information on
healthcare services turn to platforms with neither
comprehensive nor accurate information. There are a
number information sharing platforms available to
consumers to help them make healthcare choices. An
example of such a platform in existence in a number
of countries is the public reporting system.
Public reporting systems are platforms that
provide good and quality information to consumers.
Cacace (2012) defined public reporting as the
performance-related information about healthcare
and social service providers to the public in a
comparative approach. The goal of this is to give as
much information possible to affect the choices of the
consumer. It is considered as a strategy to stimulate
Damalie, E., Suomi, R., Blomqvist, P. and Ruotsalainen, K.
The Search for the Health and Social Security: Experiences from Consumers Searching for Healthcare Services.
DOI: 10.5220/0009795901030108
In Proceedings of the 6th Inter national Conference on Information and Communication Technologies for Ageing Well and e-Health (ICT4AWE 2020), pages 103-108
ISBN: 978-989-758-420-6
Copyright
c
2020 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
103
improvement in quality and promote transparency
among providers. The fact is that, one of its benefits
is it gives very detailed information to the consumer
about the various healthcare service providers
available. It serves as a link between consumer and
service providers.
There are several factors that enhances usage of
public reporting systems as a source of information
for consumers. Presentation formats of information
and the quality of information enhances the usage of
public reports and eases the decision making of the
consumer (Faber et al., 2009). Public reporting
systems serve as middlemen between consumers and
service providers as they serve as a link between the
consumer and the service provider.
The search for health services demands
middlemen to make this easy and possible for all
parties involve. Yavaş (1994) defines the middlemen
as the third person in a trade off between a buyer and
a seller, he or she matches the buyer and the seller.
Middlemen serve as a link between the consumer
with a healthcare service delivery institutions. The
role of middlemen has been visible in the real estate
business and in the employment agencies. Hence this
article looks at middlemen role of EU-healthcare.fi as
a source of information to consumers and also as a
middleman between consumers and healthcare
service providers. Yavaş (1994) further states that the
search in any market is made thinner as the
middleman reduces the search intensities. According
to Biglaiser(1993) there are two most noticeable
reason for the middle man 1) they facilitate matching
in the market, in this context the healthcare market as
that is difficult for consumers and service providers
to meet on their own 2) the middleman also validates
quality of a service or product. There is a need for
middlemen in healthcare services. Different www-
sites serve as middlemen between service providers
and user in markets, including healthcare services.
Research has revealed that for consumers to fully
benefit from the use of healthcare services, they will
require some level of understanding of eHealth,
eHealth literacy and motivation.
e-Health is defined by Mitchell (1999) as a new
term needed to describe the combined use of
electronic communication and information
technology in the health sector. The use in the health
sector of digital data –transmitted, stored and
retrieved electronically – for clinical, educational
and administrative purposes, both at the local site
and at a distance”. In 2001, Eysenbach gave a very
detailed definition of e-health as “an emerging field
in the intersection of medical informatics, public
health and business, referring to health services and
information delivered or enhanced through the
internet and related technologies. In a broader sense,
the term characterizes not only a technical
development, but also a state-of-mind, a way of
thinking, an attitude, and a commitment for
networked, global thinking, to improve health care
locally, regionally, and worldwide by using
information and communication technology”. From
the definitions, eHealth is a combination of a number
of areas of activity. For this article, the definition of
eHealth will be restricted to the definition by
Eysenbach. This definition highlights the need of
examining eHealth literacy.
eHealth literacy is defined by Norman and
Skinner (2006) as the the ability to seek, find,
understand and appraise health information from
electronic sources and apply knowledge gained to
addressing or solving health problem”. This
definition takes into account the different skills set
needed to become an eHealth literate. The key aspects
of eHealth literacy can be listed as follows: traditional
literacy, health literacy, information literacy,
scientific literacy, media literacy, and computer
literacy (Norman and Skinner,2006). These are
further divided into two central types: analytic
(traditional, media, information) and context-specific
(computer, scientific, health) (Norman and
Skinner,2006). The level of eHealth literacy affects
the access, dissemination and assimilation of
information by the intended user. This also affects the
motivation of the intended user.
Motivation to use a system is a fundamental
reason to accept and use any health information
platform. According to Keller (2008) there are five
principles of motivation: attention is building the
curiosity and gaining the attention of the consumer by
using different approaches, the second is the
relevance of the content of the public reporting
systems, a consumer’s confidence motivates them to
use a public reporting systems and the satisfaction of
the consumer with their experience is important in
building a consumer’s motivation. The combination
of eHealth, eHealth literacy and intended consumer’s
motivation drives user engagement. Intended user’s
engagement enables the possibility of making choices
based on information about healthcare choices.
2 METHODS
For this research, a qualitative survey was conducted
to recognize the best means of offering information
on cross border healthcare to targeted audience on
EU-healthcare.fi.
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2.1 Participants
For this research, a qualitative survey was conducted
to recognize the best means of offering information
on cross border healthcare to targeted audience on
EU-healthcare.fi (previously Choosehealthcare.fi).
During the research, 93 participants were reached
through campaigns on Facebook and twitter and
additionally by sending an invitation to prior contacts
made on travel fair and other events. The age profile
of the respondents ranges from between 10 and 20
years old to over 70 years old. The age profile was
quite even in
20 – 30 years old (15 persons)
30 – 40 years old (13 persons)
40 – 50 Years old (18 persons)
50 – 60 years old (24 persons)
60 – 70 years old (19 persons)
In addition to this, 4 respondents were over 70
years old and two respondents were under 20 years
old. Out of all the respondents 67 are working full
time, 18 are pensioners, 4 are students, 4 are
unemployed, 1 has a family related activity, 1 is on
leave and 1 has an informal career.
A significant share of the respondents resided in
Helsinki Metropolitan Region and the majority
represented Southern Finland. The northernmost
respondent was from Oulu. Two respondents out of
the 93 lived abroad.
The largest number (45) of respondent estimated
themselves to use healthcare services normally
approximately once every six months. A quarter (20)
of the respondents estimated themselves to use the
healthcare services approximately once every two
month. Out of the 93 respondents, 18 used healthcare
approximately once a year. Healthcare services were
used once a month by 6 respondents, 2 respondents
used more seldom healthcare services than listed
above and 2 used healthcare services often than all
respondents listed above.
2.2 Data Collection and Analysis
This section gives detailed account of how data was
collected and analysed.
2.2.1 Data Collection
Data was collected in year 2017 by the Contact Point
for Cross-Border Healthcare through a web-based
survey. As with qualitative survey research in general
is used to gain in-depth information about people’s
underlying reasoning and motivation. According to
Jasen, (2010), qualitative survey is used to study the
diversity of a topic within a given population. To
achieve this in this research open-ended survey
questions were asked to allow the respondents to
provide detailed answers. This allowed the
respondent to express what they felt about the topic
and provided exploratory data that revealed
unforeseen opportunities, quotes and issues. The
responses to these open-ended questions were used as
a basis for analysis, to develop and understand the
research questions.
2.2.2 Analysis
We used thematic qualitative analysis to find themes
that the respondents took up when answering the
survey. We used pre-analyzed material by Contact
Point for Cross-Border Healthcare and Frantic.
There are five phases that are inherent in
qualitative data analysis and these are compiling,
disassembling, reassembling, interpreting and
concluding (Yin 2011, 117). In relation to this, the
style of analysis used in this research was the
deductive thematic analysis. All answers from the
survey where combined and analysed using the six-
phase procedure suggested by Braun and Clarke,
2006 illustrated in Table 1.
Table 1: The six-step thematic analysis procedure (Barun
and Clarke, 2006).
Phase Procedure for each phase
1. Familiarization
with the data
Phase reading and rereading the data.
Immersion of self and becoming
familiar with the data.
2. Coding
Generation of codes that identify
important features that might be
relevant to answering the research
questions.
3. Generating
initial themes
Examining generated codes to identify
significant potential themes. Collating
all the data relevant to each potential
theme.
4. Reviewing
themes
Reviewing the potential themes against
the dataset, to make sure if the themes
that answer the research questions.
Themes are usually refined by
splitting, combining or discarding.
5. Defining and
naming themes
In this phase, there is the generation of
precise names for each theme and
detailed analysis of the themes.
6. Writing report
This phase begins with a fully defined
and named themes and involves the
final analysis to relate back the
research questions and writing of
report
The Search for the Health and Social Security: Experiences from Consumers Searching for Healthcare Services
105
3 RESULTS
The results from the inductive thematic analysis are
presented here to describe respondent’s behaviour,
knowledge, desires and requirements for the search of
healthcare services. Using the data collected from the
qualitative survey, 20 raw data themes were
discovered relating to respondents experience,
knowledge and perception of healthcare and EU-
healthcare.fi. Following the identification of first
themes (n= 6-10) and after the reviewed themes (n=2-
4) three defined and named themes were identified:
information platform (website), type of information
and presentation of information. (See figure 2, 3, 4).
Figure 1: Respondents need for an information platform
(Website).
Information Platform (Website)
All the respondents stated or indicated the need for a
universal information platform(website),where they
could find all the information they are searching for
concerning healthcare services within Finland and
abroad. This finding is consistent with the literatures
on eHealth, public reporting and the need for
information. Out the respondents who responded to
the question of where they searched for information,
received and found information, 5 respondents stated
from a health center or a doctor, 23 respondents stated
from Kela, 26 responded from other officials and
experts, 24 respondents stated from internet forums
and 24 respondents responded nowhere. As the
respondents answered:
”From Kela’s services in international
healthcare”
”FB and other platforms in which patients [tell
that] they have ordered drugs from abroad”
”From friends”
”From insurance companies” or ” Insurance
companies’ websites”
”I went to kela”
”The internet”
”Industry publications and from magazines I deem
trustworthy”
“In the country visited”
”The reception staff at the hotel told me where to
go”
Furthermore, from the answers provided by the
respondent, the ease of finding information has been
a critical challenging issue. As other respondents
answered:
”From the husband’s place of work /
representatives of the international company”
”From a hospital in the country”
”The The Ministry of Foreign affair’s website”
”I got an address where to go from the hotel
reception”
”From the website of the Finland-Alanya
association”
”From country-specific websites”
Figure 2: Respondent’s thoughts on the type of information.
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Type of Information
The theme type of information is made up of
information, specific and different types. Most of the
respondent emphasized the difficulty in finding the
right information as stated:
”A lot! Concrete guidance is absent or confusing.”
The respondent further specified the things she was
looking for:
”Price. Availability. Insurance. What does
insurance cover?”
“From the information on the international Kela-
card”.
Majority of the respondents furthermore emphasized
their need of very specific information. One
respondent responded to the question was there
something that she or she could not find and the
response was ” Overall it was difficult to find
information on what kinds of care were available and
how the possible billing would work.” and also posed
the question How are medical visits paid, what kind
of treatment can I receive [in the foreign country].
This was the specific question she needs answer to
and has searched for information from travel
agencies. Lastly, one respondent expressed the
difficulty in recognizing medical products and was
searching for information from a pharmacy,
Facebook and forums. The respondent posted the
question:”Do I need a certificate for my medicine?”
Figure 3: Respondents need for good presentation of
information.
Presentation of Data
Presentation of data is important to the use of
information page. Information that is not presented
well is useless to the consumer as expressed by a
number of the respondents of the survey:
”It would be nice to receive information from a
single, clear website.”
”Concrete checklists on how to act”
”Prices, quality etc. [of the services], comparative
information”
Furthermore, some respondents which to have a
single page on the internet with all the information
they will need:
”Some kind of information page online”
”It would be nice to receive information from a
single, clear website.”
”Comprehensive information in a single place and
preferably some contact information to reach if no
answers are found.”
”There were some things on Kela’s website, but
the information came in crumbs and finding it was
not easy.”
A number of respondents also emphasized the
language of the information presented
:
”Compiled on a single website in plain Finnish.”
”On Finnish-language websites.”
Presentable information should be easy to understand
and located easily on the page. The ability of finding
information is increased if the information is
presented in good and useful way. The result of lack
of proper presentation of information is stated by one
respondent:” I did not really find information on what
to do if I got into an accident.” Information validity is
a matter of concern to respondents as mentioned by
one respondent:” A website with current information
on each country and its services”
4 CONCLUSIONS
The purpose of this research was to identify the
consumers need for information to support their
decisions on healthcare service. Information platform
(website), type of information and presentation of
information were the three main themes identified
from the data. The result from this research supports
the previous research on public reporting, eHealth,
eHealth literacy, middlemen and motivation.
According to the results, there is a strong link
between the three identified themes to the effective
use of information available to consumers on
healthcare service delivery.
As seen from the data, the need for an information
platform (website) is paramount to the successful
understanding and selection of healthcare services.
Public reporting systems are just an example of such
a platform. A platform that consumers can tend to
with certainty that they will find the information they
are looking for. The knowledge of the existence of an
The Search for the Health and Social Security: Experiences from Consumers Searching for Healthcare Services
107
information platform (website) by a consumer is a
source of motivation to use the information platform
to assist in decision making in terms of healthcare.
From the data is clear that consumers will like to use
Choosehealthcare.fi, in Finnish Hoitopaikanvalinta.fi
website, which is now renamed to EU-healthcare.fi.
The middlemen have a responsibility of defining
the type of information that are presented on the
information platform (website) for consumers. From
the data collected, consumers want specific, practical
and useful information. Furthermore, consumers
want more structured information that gives them the
opportunity to compare services in different
countries. This is a motivational source to use the
information platform (website). Comprehensive and
easy-to-follow information on the healthcare system
seems to be difficult to design. With a strong
understanding of eHealth and eHealth literacy,
information platform that caters to the needs of
consumers within Finland and abroad can be
achieved.
Presentation of information is essential to the
success of the information platform (website). From
the survey is clear some consumers were not happy
with the presentation of the information. Presentation
of information comprises of font size, the various
links on the page to other pages, clarity of the
information presented and easy navigation of the
website. The eHealth literacy level of consumers
affects how they access, disseminate and assimilate
information. Hence, can affect the motivation of a
consumer to use the information platform as was
noted in the data collected.
The results show that the European and health
service scene is rather scattered, non-standard and
difficult to understand. Comprehensive and easy-to-
follow information on the healthcare system seems to
be difficult to design. It was encouraging to see that
people with very different backgrounds had found the
service and used its services. Users also found the
www-site though very many different channels. It is
clear even from our study that there is a huge demand
for middlemen-services in healthcare service
delivery, but a lot has to be done to improve their
usability, including the improvement of people’s
health literacy, as well as their social literacy
Based on this study there should be further
research exploring the themes (information platform,
presentation of information, type of information) in
greater details to form a more solid understanding of
the challenges regarding the use of EU-healthcare.fi.
Also, subsequent research should aim to facilitate
eHealth literacy of consumers as this is the future of
healthcare service delivery. Furthermore, there
should be more research on the marketing and
popularization of the EU-healthcare.fi.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Contact Point for Cross-Border Healthcare and
Frantic carried out the survey and the pre analysis of
the collected data. The authors will like to thank them
for availability of the data.
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