The role of trust in personal information disclosure on health-related websites
The role of trust in personal information disclosure on health-related websites
E-commerce adoption has been extensive but for some specialized areas it is still in the early stages. One such area is health-related websites where the sensitive issues around the consumer’s health extenuate the similar challenges faced in other areas of e-commerce. Disclosing personal information is necessary to fully utilize such health-related websites but consumer trust is required for this. This re- search proposes a model of the role of trust in personal information disclosure on health-related web- sites. This model identifies 10 factors grouped in three categories. The first category is dispositional factors including faith in humanity, trusting stance and privacy concern. the second category is situational factors including reputation and perceived risk. Lastly the third category is institutional factors including the perceived effectiveness of the privacy statement, third party certification, legal and regulation and security infrastructure. Low risk, reputation, effective privacy statement and privacy seals were found to facilitate trust. While institutional factors like the legal framework and regulation have an elevated role to keep the consumer safe in this context, lack of clarity on what they are leads to a weak perception of their value. Trust in the health-related website was found to positively influence the intention to disclose information.
Information disclosure, Trust, Health, e-Commerce
771-786
Chen, Luoxia
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Zarifis, Alex
7622e840-ba78-4a4f-879b-6ba0f62363cc
Kroenung, Julia
6e9f567d-2ba9-4b63-8e5a-0ae8d4c6852b
2017
Chen, Luoxia
e8cc4c1b-66ba-4d09-8ba6-01e7fc6bfd58
Zarifis, Alex
7622e840-ba78-4a4f-879b-6ba0f62363cc
Kroenung, Julia
6e9f567d-2ba9-4b63-8e5a-0ae8d4c6852b
Chen, Luoxia, Zarifis, Alex and Kroenung, Julia
(2017)
The role of trust in personal information disclosure on health-related websites.
In Proceedings of the 25th European Conference on Information Systems (ECIS).
.
Record type:
Conference or Workshop Item
(Paper)
Abstract
E-commerce adoption has been extensive but for some specialized areas it is still in the early stages. One such area is health-related websites where the sensitive issues around the consumer’s health extenuate the similar challenges faced in other areas of e-commerce. Disclosing personal information is necessary to fully utilize such health-related websites but consumer trust is required for this. This re- search proposes a model of the role of trust in personal information disclosure on health-related web- sites. This model identifies 10 factors grouped in three categories. The first category is dispositional factors including faith in humanity, trusting stance and privacy concern. the second category is situational factors including reputation and perceived risk. Lastly the third category is institutional factors including the perceived effectiveness of the privacy statement, third party certification, legal and regulation and security infrastructure. Low risk, reputation, effective privacy statement and privacy seals were found to facilitate trust. While institutional factors like the legal framework and regulation have an elevated role to keep the consumer safe in this context, lack of clarity on what they are leads to a weak perception of their value. Trust in the health-related website was found to positively influence the intention to disclose information.
Text
The role of trust in personal information disclosure on health-related websites ECIS 2017 Chen Zarifis
- Author's Original
Available under License Other.
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Published date: 2017
Keywords:
Information disclosure, Trust, Health, e-Commerce
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 490479
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/490479
PURE UUID: 03763fbe-92f1-45bc-ab46-c0f9a2190bcf
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Date deposited: 28 May 2024 17:03
Last modified: 06 Jun 2024 02:21
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Contributors
Author:
Luoxia Chen
Author:
Alex Zarifis
Author:
Julia Kroenung
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