Motivations and barriers to engagement with consumer health innovations: the impact of media framing on direct-to-consumer genetic testing adoption intent

Through the lens of Everett Rogers’ Diffusion of Innovations, specifically the theory of Perceived Attributes, this dissertation firstly examines key factors leading to or deterring adoption of direct-to-consumer genetic testing (DTC-GT) for health information through qualitative interviews with pro...

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Main Author: Andersen, Brittany Leigh
Other Authors: Guo, Lei
Language:en_US
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/2144/41857
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spelling ndltd-bu.edu-oai-open.bu.edu-2144-418572021-01-07T05:01:31Z Motivations and barriers to engagement with consumer health innovations: the impact of media framing on direct-to-consumer genetic testing adoption intent Andersen, Brittany Leigh Guo, Lei Communication Through the lens of Everett Rogers’ Diffusion of Innovations, specifically the theory of Perceived Attributes, this dissertation firstly examines key factors leading to or deterring adoption of direct-to-consumer genetic testing (DTC-GT) for health information through qualitative interviews with prospective customers. Results indicate that the main motivations include finding out perceived beneficial health information and comparisons to testing via medical providers. The main deterrents for adoption were reported to be privacy concerns, perceived susceptibility to conditions, and the desire to remain uncertain about one’s genetic health risk. Additionally, this dissertation considered the role of issue-specific media framing on adoption intent. A second study consisting of an experiment used media framing theory to determine which factors would lead to a higher likelihood of adoption. Results revealed that media framed to discuss the perceived advantages of the technology had the highest likelihood of adoption. Implications for theory and industry are discussed throughout this dissertation. 2021-01-05T19:32:35Z 2021-01-05T19:32:35Z 2021 2021-01-05T17:03:10Z Thesis/Dissertation https://hdl.handle.net/2144/41857 en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Communication
spellingShingle Communication
Andersen, Brittany Leigh
Motivations and barriers to engagement with consumer health innovations: the impact of media framing on direct-to-consumer genetic testing adoption intent
description Through the lens of Everett Rogers’ Diffusion of Innovations, specifically the theory of Perceived Attributes, this dissertation firstly examines key factors leading to or deterring adoption of direct-to-consumer genetic testing (DTC-GT) for health information through qualitative interviews with prospective customers. Results indicate that the main motivations include finding out perceived beneficial health information and comparisons to testing via medical providers. The main deterrents for adoption were reported to be privacy concerns, perceived susceptibility to conditions, and the desire to remain uncertain about one’s genetic health risk. Additionally, this dissertation considered the role of issue-specific media framing on adoption intent. A second study consisting of an experiment used media framing theory to determine which factors would lead to a higher likelihood of adoption. Results revealed that media framed to discuss the perceived advantages of the technology had the highest likelihood of adoption. Implications for theory and industry are discussed throughout this dissertation.
author2 Guo, Lei
author_facet Guo, Lei
Andersen, Brittany Leigh
author Andersen, Brittany Leigh
author_sort Andersen, Brittany Leigh
title Motivations and barriers to engagement with consumer health innovations: the impact of media framing on direct-to-consumer genetic testing adoption intent
title_short Motivations and barriers to engagement with consumer health innovations: the impact of media framing on direct-to-consumer genetic testing adoption intent
title_full Motivations and barriers to engagement with consumer health innovations: the impact of media framing on direct-to-consumer genetic testing adoption intent
title_fullStr Motivations and barriers to engagement with consumer health innovations: the impact of media framing on direct-to-consumer genetic testing adoption intent
title_full_unstemmed Motivations and barriers to engagement with consumer health innovations: the impact of media framing on direct-to-consumer genetic testing adoption intent
title_sort motivations and barriers to engagement with consumer health innovations: the impact of media framing on direct-to-consumer genetic testing adoption intent
publishDate 2021
url https://hdl.handle.net/2144/41857
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