2013-04-04
Consumers’ intention to use health recommendation systems to receive personalized nutrition advice
Publication
Publication
BMC Health Services Research , Volume 2013 - Issue 13 p. 126- 138
Abstract
Background: Sophisticated recommendation systems are used more and more in the health sector to assist
consumers in healthy decision making. In this study we investigate consumers' evaluation of hypothetical health
recommendation systems that provide personalized nutrition advice. We examine consumers' intention to use such
a health recommendation system as a function of options related to the underlying system (e.g. the type of
company that generates the advice) as well as intermediaries (e.g. general practitioner) that might assist in using
the system. We further explore if the effect of both the system and intermediaries on intention to use a health
recommendation system are mediated by consumers' perceived effort, privacy risk, usefulness and enjoyment.
Methods: 204 respondents from a consumer panel in the Netherlands participated. The data were collected by
means of a questionnaire. Each respondent evaluated three hypothetical health recommendation systems on
validated multi-scale measures of effort, privacy risk, usefulness, enjoyment and intention to use the system. To test
the hypothesized relationships we used regression analyses.
Results: We find evidence that the options related to the underlying system as well as the intermediaries involved
influence consumers' intention to use such a health recommendation system and that these effects are mediated
by perceptions of effort, privacy risk, usefulness and enjoyment. Also, we find that consumers value usefulness of a
system more and enjoyment less when a general practitioner advices them to use a health recommendation
system than if they use it out of their own curiosity.
Conclusions: We developed and tested a model of consumers' intention to use a health recommendation system.
We found that intermediaries play an important role in how consumers evaluate such a system over and above
options of the underlying system that is used to generate the recommendation. Also, health-related information
services seem to rely on endorsement by the medical sector. This has considerable implications for the distribution
as well as the communication channels of health recommendation systems which may be quite difficult to put into
practice outside traditional health service channels.
Additional Metadata | |
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doi.org/10.1186/1472-6963-13-126, hdl.handle.net/1765/50128 | |
BMC Health Services Research | |
Organisation | Erasmus Research Institute of Management |
Wendel, S., Dellaert, B., Ronteltap, A., & van Trijp, H. (2013). Consumers’ intention to use health recommendation systems to receive personalized nutrition advice. BMC Health Services Research, 2013(13), 126–138. doi:10.1186/1472-6963-13-126 |