Social Media Users’ Perception of Telemedicine and mHealth in China: Exploratory Study

BackgroundThe use of telemedicine and mHealth has increased rapidly in the People’s Republic of China. While telemedicine and mHealth have great potential, wide adoption of this technology depends on how patients, health care providers, and other stakeholders in the Chinese h...

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Main Authors: Leung, Ricky, Guo, Huibin, Pan, Xuan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2018-09-01
Series:JMIR mHealth and uHealth
Online Access:http://mhealth.jmir.org/2018/9/e181/
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spelling doaj-c345242813d048d482aaabb5f8c151172021-05-02T19:27:48ZengJMIR PublicationsJMIR mHealth and uHealth2291-52222018-09-0169e18110.2196/mhealth.7623Social Media Users’ Perception of Telemedicine and mHealth in China: Exploratory StudyLeung, RickyGuo, HuibinPan, Xuan BackgroundThe use of telemedicine and mHealth has increased rapidly in the People’s Republic of China. While telemedicine and mHealth have great potential, wide adoption of this technology depends on how patients, health care providers, and other stakeholders in the Chinese health sector perceive and accept the technology. ObjectiveTo explore this issue, we aimed to examine a social media platform with a dedicated focus on health information technology and informatics in China. Our goal is to utilize the findings to support further research. MethodsIn this exploratory study, we selected a social media platform—HC3i.cn—to examine the perception of telemedicine and mHealth in China. We performed keyword analysis and analyzed the prevalence and term frequency–inverse document frequency of keywords in the selected social media platform; furthermore, we performed qualitative analysis. ResultsWe organized the most prominent 16 keywords from 571 threads into 8 themes: (1) Question versus Answer; (2) Hospital versus Clinic; (3) Market versus Company; (4) Doctor versus Nurse; (5) Family versus Patient; (6) iPad versus Tablet; (7) System versus App; and (8) Security versus Caregiving. Social media participants perceived not only significant opportunities associated with telemedicine and mHealth but also barriers to overcome to realize these opportunities. ConclusionsWe identified interesting issues in this paper by studying a social media platform in China. Among other things, participants in the selected platform raised concerns about quality and costs associated with the provision of telemedicine and mHealth, despite the new technology’s great potential to address different issues in the Chinese health sector. The methods applied in this paper have some limitations, and the findings may not be generalizable. We have discussed directions for further research.http://mhealth.jmir.org/2018/9/e181/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Leung, Ricky
Guo, Huibin
Pan, Xuan
spellingShingle Leung, Ricky
Guo, Huibin
Pan, Xuan
Social Media Users’ Perception of Telemedicine and mHealth in China: Exploratory Study
JMIR mHealth and uHealth
author_facet Leung, Ricky
Guo, Huibin
Pan, Xuan
author_sort Leung, Ricky
title Social Media Users’ Perception of Telemedicine and mHealth in China: Exploratory Study
title_short Social Media Users’ Perception of Telemedicine and mHealth in China: Exploratory Study
title_full Social Media Users’ Perception of Telemedicine and mHealth in China: Exploratory Study
title_fullStr Social Media Users’ Perception of Telemedicine and mHealth in China: Exploratory Study
title_full_unstemmed Social Media Users’ Perception of Telemedicine and mHealth in China: Exploratory Study
title_sort social media users’ perception of telemedicine and mhealth in china: exploratory study
publisher JMIR Publications
series JMIR mHealth and uHealth
issn 2291-5222
publishDate 2018-09-01
description BackgroundThe use of telemedicine and mHealth has increased rapidly in the People’s Republic of China. While telemedicine and mHealth have great potential, wide adoption of this technology depends on how patients, health care providers, and other stakeholders in the Chinese health sector perceive and accept the technology. ObjectiveTo explore this issue, we aimed to examine a social media platform with a dedicated focus on health information technology and informatics in China. Our goal is to utilize the findings to support further research. MethodsIn this exploratory study, we selected a social media platform—HC3i.cn—to examine the perception of telemedicine and mHealth in China. We performed keyword analysis and analyzed the prevalence and term frequency–inverse document frequency of keywords in the selected social media platform; furthermore, we performed qualitative analysis. ResultsWe organized the most prominent 16 keywords from 571 threads into 8 themes: (1) Question versus Answer; (2) Hospital versus Clinic; (3) Market versus Company; (4) Doctor versus Nurse; (5) Family versus Patient; (6) iPad versus Tablet; (7) System versus App; and (8) Security versus Caregiving. Social media participants perceived not only significant opportunities associated with telemedicine and mHealth but also barriers to overcome to realize these opportunities. ConclusionsWe identified interesting issues in this paper by studying a social media platform in China. Among other things, participants in the selected platform raised concerns about quality and costs associated with the provision of telemedicine and mHealth, despite the new technology’s great potential to address different issues in the Chinese health sector. The methods applied in this paper have some limitations, and the findings may not be generalizable. We have discussed directions for further research.
url http://mhealth.jmir.org/2018/9/e181/
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