- About the Action
- Events
- PhD workshop - Ljubljana 2014
- Action Open Conference - Ljubljana 2014
- New Media and Participation conference - Istanbul 2013
- Belgrade meeting 2013
- Media literacy research and policy - Brussels 2013
- ICA Pre-Conference 2013
- Tampere meeting 2013
- Budapest workshop 2012
- Milan meeting 2012
- Brussels PhD workshop 2012
- Brussels Action workshop 2012
- London meeting 2011
- Zagreb Conference 2011
- Lisbon meeting 2010
- Affiliated events
- WG 1
- WG 2
- WG 3
- WG 4
- Cross-WG
- Output
Senior patients online: Which functions should a good patient website offer?
Loos, E., Bol, N., Scholz, C., Smets, E. M. A., de Haes, J. C. J. M., & van Weert, J. C. M. (2013). Senior patients online: Which functions should a good patient website offer?. C. Stephanidis & M. Antona (Eds.). Universal Access in Human-Computer Interaction, Proceedings HCII 2013, Part II, LNCS 8010, 32-41Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer.
Abstract: This study proposes a theoretical framework for patient website functions and provides empirical input for the framework. A pilot survey among younger (aged 50 – 64, M = 55.95, SD = 4.48, n = 21) and older (aged 65 – 84, M = 72.79, SD = 6.33, n = 14) cancer patients revealed that patients’ website preferences vary across type of website functions as well as across age groups. Whereas the majority of patients reported high preference for website functions in general (e.g., information provision), preferences varied across preferred delivery methods of these functions. Furthermore, differences in information preferences indicate a trend of younger patients preferring to search information themselves whereas older patients seem to prefer receiving disease relevant information and practical tips. We provide first evidence for patient preferences regarding specific website functions and thus provide practical implications for website design.