Mobile medical platforms (MMPs) can make medical services more accessible and effective. However, the patient-centered factors that influence patients' acceptance of MMPs are not well understood. Our study examined the factors affecting patients' acceptance of MMPs by integrating the theory of planned behavior (TPB), the technology acceptance model (TAM), and three patient-centered factors (i.e., perceived convenience, perceived credibility, and perceived privacy risk). Three hundred and eighty-nine Chinese respondents were recruited in this study and completed a self-administered online questionnaire that included items adapted from validated measurement scales. The partial least squares structural equation modeling results revealed that perceived privacy risk, perceived credibility, and perceived ease of use directly determined the perceived usefulness of an MMP. Perceived convenience, perceived credibility, and perceived usefulness significantly affected the patients' attitudes toward MMPs. Perceived usefulness, attitude, perceived privacy risk, and perceived behavioral control were important determinants of the patients' behavioral intentions to use MMPs. Behavioral intention and perceived behavioral control significantly influenced perceived effective use. Perceived credibility and perceived ease of use significantly affected perceived convenience. However, social influence had no significant effect on attitude and behavioral intention. The study provides important theoretical and practical implications, which could help practitioners enhance the patients' use of MMPs for their healthcare activities.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph191710758 | DOI Listing |
J Osteopath Med
January 2025
Director of Medical Education, OhioHealth/Doctors Hospital, Columbus, OH, USA.
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View Article and Find Full Text PDFJMIR Form Res
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Institute of Nursing Science, Faculty of Medicine, University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany.
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Indiana University, Indianapolis, IN, United States.
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January 2025
Department of Intelligence and Information, Seoul National University.
This study delves into how various musical factors influence the experience of auditory illusions, building on Diana Deutsch's scale illusion experiments and subsequent studies. Exploring the interaction between scale mode and timbre, this study assesses their influence on auditory misperceptions, while also considering the impact of an individual's musical training and ability to discern absolute pitch. Participants were divided into nonmusicians, musicians with absolute pitch, and musicians with relative pitch, and were exposed to stimuli modified across three scale modes (tonal, dissonant, atonal) and two timbres (same, different).
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Paraíba State University, Dentistry Program (Campina Grande/PB, Brazil).
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Objective: The aim of this study was to estimate the prevalence of severe malocclusion and its impact on oral health-related quality of life in schoolchildren aged 12-15 years.
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